As an extension of the act, the Bundled Payments for Care Improvement (BPCI) initiative was rolled out in 2011. The BPCI initiative speaks directly to the mission of the Affordable Care Act, centrally in its incentive-driven method of improving quality of care and implementing an efficient process of distributing payment to healthcare facilities.
The BPCI initiative stipulates that Medicare will send a bundled payment for a patient's medical episode to a facility or healthcare provider. This contrasts significantly from the traditional route, which is known for its messy, inefficient, and potentially more expensive system. BPCI was unraveled as a voluntary system with four models that broadly define the system in different ways. Although each model is unique in the system it defines, Models 2 and 3 comprise the vast majority of national BPCI facilities. Across the state of Alabama specifically, six facilities elected for Model 2 and five facilities elected for Model 3, while none opted for either Model 1 or 4.
As is to be expected, many U.S. citizens, doctors and patients alike, are hesitant about new healthcare initiatives. However, the benefits of the BPCI far outweigh the drawbacks. Doctors and facilities can focus on providing a high standard of care; gone will be the days of the antiquated fee-for-payment model, which forces doctors to view patients as numbers instead of individuals
Additionally, the movement of payment from Medicare to healthcare facility will be far less complicated and timely than in the previous system. Similar to the providers, patients will benefit substantially from BPCI-induced changes. The following are just a few of the central benefits that patients should expect to see under the BPCI initiative:
Whether you are coming from the perspective of a patient or a doctor, it is important for each side to understand the scope of the BPCI initiative and its implications at the workplace or center of treatment. As a doctor, you can verify your workplace's use of BPCI and its associated operating model; this knowledge will help you better understand the priorities of your role. As a patient, you can ask questions prior to treatment so that you understand where your coverage will be coming from.