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MMHA 6900 Walden University Week 2 Improving Population Health Letter

MMHA 6900 Walden University Week 2 Improving Population Health Letter

There are mechanisms in place that are used to improve population health, including (1) health statuses and outcomes, (2) determinant factors, and (3) interventions that address determinant factors and improve outcomes (Joshi et al., 2014 p. 549). How health care is provided and how it can be improved is the focus of this assignment, which lends itself to a perfect opportunity for you to put your analysis skills into practice. The Learning Resources section this week provides you with data from the patient experience of care that also sheds light on expectations that have and have not been met. The Healthy People 2020 data provides measurements and goals for health care into the future, along with reasons for achieving those goals.
For this Assignment, you will read a scenario, analyze an existing problem using the data/resources provided, and make recommendations to address the issues.
To prepare:
Review all Learning Resources for the week that relate to improving population health.
The Assignment:
Read the following scenario:
The community of Springfield (population approximately 100,000) is made up of hardworking, mostly older, factory laborers who contributed to both the city and county growth from the late 1950s through early 2005. Since the plant closed, many of the former workers have little to look forward to. There are few jobs available and they are now aging; most are 60 years of age or older.
The Memorial Hospital has been in existence since the mid-1950s and has several primary care physicians and nurse practitioners, a couple of general surgeons, and one cardiologist, but no cardiac surgeons.
Many nurses are recruited from the nearby community college, and the hospital serves as the facility for clinical rounds in their education.
The community is pretty sedentary, with the exception of an occasional game of horseshoes. Cigarette smoking is prominent.
Serious concerns surround the continued existence of the hospital because many residents seek and obtain health care services elsewhere.
Compare the population of this city to other problem areas using the Healthy People sources. The town’s population is approximately 100,000, making the comparison fairly straightforward.
Using the information provided in the scenario and the:
From this week’s Learning Resources, write a 2-page Letter to the Editor of the local paper that includes:

An evaluation of the issues that would be the focus on need for quality improvement
An analysis of existing problems/issues based on data/resources provided
2 or 3 recommended strategies to address each quality improvement issues
HCAHPS Data and Healthy People 2020 Data
Patients who
reported that:
Their nurses “Always”
communicated well.
Their doctors “Always”
communicated well.
They “Always” received help as
soon as they wanted.
Their pain was “Always” well
controlled.
Their room and bathroom were
“Always” clean.
Patients who gave their hospital
a rating of 9 or 10 on a scale
from 0 [lowest] to 10 [highest].
Patients who reported YES,
they would definitely
Recommend the hospital.
HCAHPS Data
Memorial
#1 local
#2 local
Hospital
Competitor Competitor
National
Average
72%
78%
90%
81%
79%
74%
79%
80%
83%
82%
55%
62%
66%
67%
68%
66%
69%
70%
72%
71%
69%
74%
75%
72%
74%
65%
69%
70%
70%
71%
65%
70%
70%
70%
71%
Springfield—Healthy People Data
2007
2010
Reduce the overall cancer rate
179.3
172.8
Reduce lung cancer death rate
50.6
47.6
Reduce the colorectal cancer death
rate
17.1
15.9
Reduce the diabetes death rate
74
70.7
© 2016 Laureate Education, Inc.
State
Average
2015
174.2
48.1
2020 Goal
169
45.5
16
67.6
14.5
66.6
Page 1 of 2
Reduce the coronary heart disease
deaths
Reduce the rate of death among
adolescents
Increase the proportion of adults aged
18 years and older with major
depressive episodes who receive
treatment
Increase the proportion of smoke free
homes
© 2016 Laureate Education, Inc.
129.2
113.6
122
103.2
60.3
59.4
60.1
54.3
69
68.2
67.6
75.9
79.7
83.9
78.8
87
*** Age adjusted, per 100,000 population
Page 2 of 2
HCAHPS Fact Sheet
(CAHPS® Hospital Survey)
October 2019
Overview
The HCAHPS (Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems) Survey is
the first national, standardized, publicly reported survey of patients’ perspectives of hospital care.
HCAHPS (pronounced “H-caps”), also known as the CAHPS® Hospital Survey*, is a 29-item
survey instrument and data collection methodology for measuring patients’ perceptions of their
hospital experience. While hospitals collected information on patient satisfaction for their own
internal use prior to HCAHPS, until HCAHPS there were no common metrics and no national
standards for collecting and publicly reporting information about patient experience of care.
Since 2008, HCAHPS has allowed valid comparisons to be made across hospitals locally,
regionally and nationally.
Three broad goals have shaped HCAHPS. First, the standardized survey and implementation
protocol produces data that allow objective and meaningful comparisons of hospitals on topics
that are important to patients and consumers. Second, public reporting of HCAHPS results
creates incentives for hospitals to improve quality of care. Third, public reporting enhances
accountability in health care by increasing transparency of the quality of hospital care provided
in return for the public investment.
HCAHPS Development, Testing and Endorsement
Beginning in 2002, CMS partnered with the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
(AHRQ), another agency in the federal Department of Health and Human Services, to develop
and test the HCAHPS Survey. AHRQ and its CAHPS Consortium carried out a rigorous and
multi-faceted scientific process, including a public call for measures; literature review; cognitive
interviews; consumer focus groups; stakeholder input; a three-state pilot test; extensive
psychometric analyses; consumer testing; and numerous small-scale field tests. CMS provided
three opportunities for the public to comment on HCAHPS during the initial development and
responded to over a thousand comments. The survey, its methodology and the results it produces
are in the public domain.
In May 2005, the HCAHPS Survey was originally endorsed by the National Quality Forum, a
national organization that represents the consensus of many healthcare providers, consumer
groups, professional associations, purchasers, federal agencies, and research organizations. In
December 2005, the federal Office of Management and Budget gave its final approval for the
national implementation of HCAHPS for public reporting purposes. CMS implemented the
HCAHPS Survey in October 2006, and the first public reporting of HCAHPS results occurred in
March 2008. In 2013, CMS added five new items to the HCAHPS Survey: three questions about
the transition to post-hospital care, one about admission through the emergency room, and one
about mental and emotional health. In January 2018, the three survey questions about pain
management were replaced by three questions about communication about pain. In compliance
Originally Posted: 10/01/2019
1
with the SUPPORT for Patients and Communities Act of 2018 (Pub. L. 115-271), in October
2019 the three communication about pain items were removed from the HCAHPS Survey,
reducing the survey to 29 items.
The enactment of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 created an additional incentive for acute
care hospitals to participate in HCAHPS. Since July 2007, hospitals subject to the Inpatient
Prospective Payment System (IPPS) annual payment update provisions must collect and submit
HCAHPS data in order to receive their full annual payment update. Non-IPPS hospitals, such as
Critical Access Hospitals, may voluntarily participate in HCAHPS. The incentive for IPPS
hospitals to improve patient experience was further strengthened by the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-148), which specifically included HCAHPS performance
in the calculation of the value-based incentive payment in the Hospital Value-Based Purchasing
program beginning with October 2012 discharges.
HCAHPS Survey Content and Administration
The HCAHPS Survey asks recently discharged patients about aspects of their hospital experience
that they are uniquely suited to address. The core of the survey contains 19 items that ask “how
often” or whether patients experienced a critical aspect of hospital care, rather than whether they
were “satisfied” with their care. Also included in the survey are three screener items that direct
patients to relevant questions, five items to adjust for the mix of patients across hospitals, and
two items that support Congressionally-mandated reports. Hospitals are permitted to add their
own supplemental items after the 29 official HCAHPS questions. CMS does not review, approve
or obtain data from supplemental items. Hospitals should carefully limit their use to minimize
any negative impact on survey response rates.
HCAHPS is administered to a random sample of adult inpatients between 48 hours and six
weeks after discharge. Patients admitted in the medical, surgical and maternity care service lines
are eligible for the survey; HCAHPS is not restricted to Medicare patients. Hospitals may use an
approved survey vendor or collect their own HCAHPS data, if approved by CMS to do so.
HCAHPS can be implemented in four survey modes: Mail Only, Telephone Only, Mixed (mail
with telephone follow-up), or Active Interactive Voice Response (IVR), each of which requires
multiple attempts to contact patients. Hospitals must survey patients throughout each month of
the year. IPPS hospitals must achieve at least 300 completed surveys over four calendar quarters.
In addition to English, HCAHPS is available in official Spanish, Chinese, Russian, Vietnamese,
Portuguese, and German translations. The survey and its protocols for sampling, data collection,
coding and submission can be found in the HCAHPS Quality Assurance Guidelines (QAG)
manual located in the Quality Assurance section of the official HCAHPS On-Line Web site at
https://www.hcahpsonline.org.
HCAHPS Measures
Ten HCAHPS measures (six composite measures, two individual items and two global items) are
publicly reported on the Hospital Compare Web site at
https://www.medicare.gov/hospitalcompare. Each of the six composite measures is constructed
from two or three survey questions. Combining closely related questions into composites allows
consumers to quickly review patient experience information while increasing the statistical
reliability of the measures. The six composites summarize how well nurses and doctors
communicate with patients, how responsive hospital staff are to patients’ needs, how well the
Originally Posted: 10/01/2019
2
staff communicates with patients about new medicines, whether key information is provided at
discharge, and how well patients understand the type of care they will need after leaving the
hospital. The two individual items address the cleanliness and quietness of patients’ rooms, while
the two global items capture patients’ overall rating of the hospital and whether they would
recommend it to family and friends. Hospitals’ survey response rate and the number of
completed surveys are also publicly reported.
To ensure that HCAHPS scores allow fair and accurate comparisons among hospitals, it is
necessary to adjust for factors that are not directly related to hospital performance but which
affect how patients answer survey items. CMS and the HCAHPS Project Team (HPT) apply
adjustments that are intended to eliminate any advantage or disadvantage attributable to the
mode of survey administration or characteristics of patients that are beyond a hospital’s control.
A detailed explanation of patient-mix adjustment and the actual adjustments applied can be
found at https://www.hcahpsonline.org/en/mode–patient-mix-adj/. The HPT undertakes a series
of quality oversight activities, which include regular site visits at approved HCAHPS Survey
vendors to inspect survey administration procedures and trace records, and statistical analyses of
submitted data, to assure that the HCAHPS Survey is being administered properly and
consistently.
HCAHPS scores are designed and intended for use at the hospital level for the comparison of
hospitals to each other. CMS does not review or endorse the use of HCAHPS scores for
comparisons within hospitals, such as comparison of HCAHPS scores associated with a
particular ward, floor, individual staff member, etc. to others. Such comparisons are unreliable
unless large sample sizes are collected at the ward, floor, or individual staff member level. In
addition, since HCAHPS questions inquire about broad categories of hospital staff (such as
doctors in general and nurses in general rather than specific individuals), HCAHPS is not
appropriate for comparing or assessing individual staff members. Using HCAHPS scores to
compare or assess individual staff members is inappropriate and strongly discouraged by CMS.
HCAHPS Public Reporting on Hospital Compare
Official HCAHPS scores, based on four consecutive quarters of patient surveys, are publicly
reported on the Hospital Compare Web site, https://www.medicare.gov/hospitalcompare, four
times each year, with the oldest quarter of surveys rolling off as the newest quarter rolls on. A
link to the downloadable version of HCAHPS results is also available on this Web site. Hospitals
must have at least 25 completed surveys in a four-quarter period in order for their HCAHPS
results to be publicly reported. In March 2008, 2,521 hospitals publicly reported HCAHPS scores
based on 1.1 million completed surveys; in October 2019, 4,482 hospitals publicly reported
HCAHPS scores based on 3.0 million completed surveys. On average, approximately 8,000
patients complete the HCAHPS Survey every day.
Aggregate HCAHPS scores, both current and historical, can be found in the Summary Analyses
section of the official HCAHPS Web site at https://www.hcahpsonline.org. The tables include
national and state “top-box” (most positive survey response) and “bottom-box” (most negative
survey response) percentiles for each measure, inter-correlations of the measures, and
comparisons of HCAHPS results by hospital characteristics. The top-box scores for the 15
individual survey questions that form the six HCAHPS composite measures are also posted in
the Summary Analyses section. The individual question scores are presented for informational
Originally Posted: 10/01/2019
3
purposes only; they are not official HCAHPS measures. However, they afford more granular
insights into patient experience of care. The HCAHPS Web site also provides news and updates
about the survey, training materials, the survey instrument and implementation protocols, and a
bibliography of published research from the HCAHPS Project Team. The HPT has produced and
posted a series of user-friendly podcasts on the HCAHPS On-Line Web site
(https://www.hcahpsonline.org/en/podcasts/) to further understanding of HCAHPS content,
implementation, adjustment and scoring.
HCAHPS Survey results are intended to be used for quality improvement purposes, not for
marketing or promotional activities. Only the HCAHPS scores published on the Hospital
Compare Web site are the “official” scores. Scores derived from any other source are
“unofficial” and should be labeled as such.
HCAHPS Star Ratings
In April 2015, CMS added HCAHPS Star Ratings to the Hospital Compare Web site. HCAHPS
Star Ratings summarize all survey responses for each HCAHPS measure and present these in a
simple format that is familiar to consumers, making it easier to use the information and spotlight
excellence in healthcare quality. Eleven HCAHPS Star Ratings currently appear on Hospital
Compare: one for each of the 10 publicly reported HCAHPS measures plus the Summary Star
Rating, which combines all of the star ratings. HCAHPS Star Ratings are updated quarterly.
Hospitals must have at least 100 completed HCAHPS surveys over a four-quarter period and be
eligible for public reporting of HCAHPS measures to receive HCAHPS Star Ratings. While
hospitals with fewer than 100 completed surveys are not assigned star ratings, their HCAHPS
measure scores are reported on Hospital Compare. Since July 2016, HCAHPS Star Ratings have
been used as a component of the Hospital Compare Overall Star Ratings.
Detailed information about HCAHPS Star Ratings can be found in the HCAHPS Star Ratings
section of the HCAHPS Web site at https://www.hcahpsonline.org/en/hcahps-star-ratings/. The
HCAHPS Star Rating Technical Notes describe how the star ratings are calculated and contain
both the current and historical adjustments for patient mix and survey mode. Current and
historical distributions of the star ratings, the distribution of the Summary Star Rating for each
state, a presentation, and frequently asked questions about the HCAHPS Star Ratings are also
available.
HCAHPS and Hospital Value-Based Purchasing
CMS’s Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (Hospital VBP) program links a portion of IPPS
hospital payment from CMS to performance on a set of quality measures. HCAHPS is the basis
for the Person and Community Engagement (PCE) domain, which accounts for 25% of a
hospital’s Hospital VBP Total Performance Score (TPS). For information, click here.
Eight HCAHPS measures, or “dimensions,” are included in Hospital VBP: six HCAHPS
composite measures (Communication with Nurses, Communication with Doctors, Staff
Responsiveness, Communication about Medicines, Discharge Information, and Care Transition);
a dimension that combines the Cleanliness and Quietness items; and one global item (Hospital
Rating). The PCE domain score is based on the percentage of a hospital’s patients who chose the
most positive, or top-box, survey response.
Originally Posted: 10/01/2019
4
The PCE domain score (0–100 points) is the sum of the HCAHPS Base Score (0–80 points) and
HCAHPS Consistency Score (0–20 points). Hospital VBP utilizes HCAHPS scores from two
calendar years: the Baseline Period and the Performance Period, which is two years later. Each
of the eight HCAHPS dimensions contributes to the Base Score through either Improvement
Points or Achievement Points. “Improvement” is the amount of change in a hospital’s HCAHPS
dimension from the Baseline to the Performance Period. “Achievement” is the comparison of
each dimension in the Performance Period to the national median for that dimension in the
Baseline Period. The larger of the Improvement Points or Achievement Points for each
dimension contributes to the Base Score. The HCAHPS Consistency Score, the second part of
the PCE domain, is designed to target and further incentivize improvement in a hospital’s lowest
performing HCAHPS dimension.
More information about the Hospital VBP program can be found on the CMS Web site at
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/ValueBased-Programs/HVBP/Hospital-Value-Based-Purchasing.html and under the HCAHPS and
Hospital VBP section of the HCAHPS Web site at https://www.hcahpsonline.org/en/hcahps-andhospital-vbp/.
Review and Revision of HCAHPS
CMS believes that ongoing review and evaluation are vital for HCAHPS to continue to fulfill its
mission of providing a national standard for collecting and publicly reporting information about
patient experience. We are planning a multi-faceted review of the survey over the coming year.
Once approval is received from the federal Office of Management and Budget, CMS plans to test
an electronic (e-mail) mode of HCAHPS. In addition, CMS is planning an extensive evaluation
of survey content, beginning by talking to recent patients about their hospital experience to
understand from their perspective what is most important to them, and obtaining additional input
on patients’ understanding of the current survey and potential new or re-worded questions. The
next step will be gathering input from stakeholders on potential changes to and suggestions for
the survey before any revisions are rigorously tested. Throughout this process, the HPT will
provide information and updates on the HCAHPS On-Line Web site.
For More Information
For information about HCAHPS policy updates, administration procedures, patient-mix and
mode adjustments, training opportunities, and participation in the survey, please visit the
HCAHPS Web site at https://www.hcahpsonline.org.
To Provide Comments or Ask Questions
•
•
To communicate with CMS about HCAHPS: [email protected]
For technical assistance with the HCAHPS Survey: [email protected] or 888-884-4007
Internet citation: https://www.hcahpsonline.org Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Baltimore,
MD. Month, Date, Year the page was accessed.
* CAHPS® is a registered trademark of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, a U.S.
Government agency.
Originally Posted: 10/01/2019
5
HCAHPS
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is the HCAHPS survey?
A: The Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) survey was
established in 2002 by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) when the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) was asked to develop an instrument to measure patient
perceptions of care. AHRQ and CMS designed the measurement to be used to publicly report hospital
performance (quality of care as perceived by patients). The goal of this public reporting instrument, as
stated by CMS, is to provide consumers with information that might be helpful in choosing a hospital.
CMS has also stated that the survey should complement rather than compete with quality improvement
instruments already being used by hospitals.
Q: Who is required to participate in the HCAHPS survey?
A: Hospitals that are paid under the Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS) are required to report
quality data to CMS, including HCAHPS data. As a result, hospitals that are not paid under the IPPS,
such as critical access hospitals and some specialty hospitals, are not subject to HCAHPS requirements.
If you are unsure whether your hospital should participate in HCAHPS, contact [email protected]
or call 1-888-884-4007.
Q: What does the HCAHPS survey measure?
A: The HCAHPS survey contains 32* questions about the patient’s recent hospital stay, covering the
following topics. The instrument can be either used as a stand-alone survey or embedded into an existing
patient survey with the core HCAHPS questions at the beginning of the survey. The hospital can decide
how many supplemental questions it wishes to add.
The survey questions will be reported in the following domains:
?
Communication with Doctors (composite)
?
Communication with Nurses (composite)
?
Responsiveness of Hospital Staff (composite)
?
Communication about Pain* (composite)
?
Communication about Medicines (composite)
?
Care Transition (composite)
?
Cleanliness of Hospital Environment (individual)
?
Quietness of Hospital Environment (individual)
?
Discharge Information (composite)
?
Overall Hospital Rating (global)
?
Likelihood to Recommend (global)
*The Communication about Pain domain will be removed from the HCAHPS survey effective with October
1, 2019, discharges. This domain will never be publicly reported or included in the Hospital Value-Based
Purchasing Program.
Q: Is reimbursement tied to HCAHPS participation?
A: Hospitals reimbursed under the Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS) within the Medicare
program that fail to report the required quality measures (which include the HCAHPS survey) could
receive an annual payment update (APU) that is reduced by 25%. Non-IPPS hospitals (e.g., critical
access hospitals) can voluntarily participate in HCAHPS. However, neither participation nor nonparticipation in HCAHPS will affect the annual payment update of hospitals that are not subject to IPPS
© 2019 Press Ganey Associates, Inc.
1
payment provisions. In addition, hospital performance on the HCAHPS survey affects the hospital’s base
operating Medicare payments by 2.0%, positively or negatively, as part of the Hospital Value-Based
Purchasing Program.
Q: Which patients are eligible for the survey?
A: The survey is designed for all (not just Medicare) adult patients discharged from general acute-care
hospitals after an overnight stay. Exclusion criteria include patients who:
?
Are under 18
?
Died in the hospital
?
Were discharged to hospice
?
Received psychiatric or rehabilitative services
?
Are prisoners
?
Are observation patients
?
Have international addresses
Q: How many patients will be surveyed?
A: CMS has indicated that participating facilities must target a minimum of 300 completed surveys per
year per Medicare Provider Number (CCN).
Q: How often are patients eligible to receive the HCAHPS survey?
A: Patients are eligible to be sampled for the HCAHPS survey once per calendar month (by discharge
date).
Q: When should the survey be sent to the patient, and when does it need to be
returned?
A: Surveys must be distributed between 48 hours and six weeks post-discharge to be included. Data
collection must close six weeks following the start of data collection for each respondent.
Q: Will the survey vendor submit the HCAHPS data to CMS?
A: Yes. The survey vendor will submit HCAHPS data to CMS on the organization’s behalf.
Q: Are we required to send all inpatient records to Press Ganey?
A: Yes, this is a CMS requirement designed to ensure that all eligible patient discharges are reported.
You cannot sample records before sending the files to Press Ganey. Per CMS guidelines, Press Ganey
must be able to count the number of eligible discharges and attest to the randomness of the sample. All
inpatient discharge records must be sent and all required fields must be populated in the upload.
Q: Should patients who are discharged to another facility receive a mailed or
phone survey at their home or at the other facility?
A: Press Ganey will attempt to contact all discharged patients at the home address/telephone number
provided in the hospital’s administrative record.
Q: Can we sample once a year to fulfill the HCAHPS requirement?
A: No. In order to have your data publicly reported, you must have data for every month. Most hospitals
sample on an ongoing basis each month.
© 2019 Press Ganey Associates, Inc.
2
Q: How many completed surveys do we need to receive in order to have our data
publicly reported?
A: CMS requires hospitals to submit a minimum of 300 completed HCAHPS surveys over a rolling fourquarter period. Small hospitals not able to reach that volume must sample all eligible records and submit
as much data as possible. For HCAHPS results to be publicly reported on Hospital Compare, only 25
completed surveys in the 12-month reporting period are required. In order to receive HCAHPS star
ratings on Hospital Compare, a hospital must have at least 100 completed surveys. Hospitals that do not
receive 300 returns over a 12-month period will see a footnote applied to their top box scores on Hospital
Compare.
Q: What are the approved survey modes for HCAHPS?
A: The survey can be administered via any of the following: two-wave mail survey, five-attempt phone
survey, combined mail/phone survey, or Active Interactive Voice Response (Active IVR). However, Press
Ganey does not administer the HCAHPS survey via combined mail/phone or Active IVR.
Reporting
Q: When will national implementation data be publicly reported?
A: The first public reporting of HCAHPS results occurred in March 2008, and the data is available on the
Hospital Compare website. Hospital results are refreshed on a quarterly basis. Participating hospitals will
receive a Preview Report from CMS that contains their results prior to each quarterly refresh.
Q: What is the patient-mix adjustment?
A: The patient-mix adjustment is a calculation used to adjust a hospital’s results, based on patient and
hospital demographics, to reflect what one would expect from a “typical” patient population. The intent of
the patient-mix adjustment is to make data comparable across different settings. CMS will apply the
patient-mix adjustment to a hospital’s data before it is publicly reported.
Q: Does CMS adjust the data in other ways?
A: CMS also performs a mode adjustment to account for systematic differences between survey modes.
Patients generally respond more favorably to a phone survey, so CMS adjusts the data to account for
these differences between mail mode and telephone mode, making the results comparable across all
survey modes. CMS applies the mode adjustment to a hospital’s data before it is publicly reported.
Q: Do star ratings exist for the HCAHPS data?
A: Yes. CMS reports star ratings for each individual HCAHPS composite measure, the individual items,
and the global items. In addition, CMS calculates and reports an HCAHPS Summary Star Rating, which is
the average of all the star ratings (6 Composite Measure Star Ratings + 2 Star Ratings for Individual
Items + 2 Star Ratings for Global Items).
Q: Does the Communication about Pain Domain receive a star rating?
A: The Pain Management domain was removed from public reporting with the July 2018 refresh. While
the Pain Management domain was replaced with the Communication about Pain domain, the
Communication about Pain domain is being removed from the survey effective with October 2019
discharges. As a result, pain questions will not be included in public reporting and will not receive a star
rating.
© 2019 Press Ganey Associates, Inc.
3
Q: How many completed surveys are required to receive HCAHPS star ratings?
A: Hospitals must have at least 100 completed HCAHPS surveys over a four-quarter period in order to
receive the HCAHPS star ratings.
Disclaimer: Information and timelines presented herein are based solely upon Press Ganey’s experience with other CAHPS initiatives and our
interpretation of CMS rulemaking and policy statements. Official CMS policy is distributed as part of CMS’s normal rulemaking process. Information
regarding the use of a visit-specific survey for targeted performance improvement is Press Ganey’s recommendation based on our experience and
expertise. The information herein does not represent the views or policies of CMS or any other government agency.
© 2019 Press Ganey Associates, Inc.
4

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