17
|
Commenters
noted that the question (In
the last 6 months, how often did you need medical care but could
not get it because you were concerned about a public health
emergency (such as the coronavirus outbreak)?
was timely and of interest to stakeholders.
Commenters
noted that the current question seems largely outside of the
control of the health plan.
Commenters
requested more information on how the data from this question
would be used (e.g., case-mix adjustment, evaluating plan
performance, etc.).
Commenters
expressed concerns that the current question conflates access to
care and beneficiaries’ choice to get care because they
were concerned. One commenter recommended asking both about
access to care during a public health emergency and concerns
about accessing care separately.
Commenters
noted that the negatively worded question could be a challenge
to respondents and may impact responses to other access
questions.
Commenter
suggested adding “do not include dental care”
instructions to align with other survey questions.
|
In
the last 6 months, how often did you need medical care but
could not get it
because of a public health emergency (such as the coronavirus
outbreak)? Do not
include
dental care.
|
“Your Health Care in
the Last 6 Months” Section
|
Commenter
recommended removing “or” after doctor’s
office in the instructions (these
questions ask about your own health care. This includes care you
got in a clinic, emergency room, doctor’s office, or by
telephone or video appointments. Do not include care you got
when you stayed overnight in a hospital. Do not include the
times you went for dental care visits. Please answer the
questions based on your experience with the health plan you had
from July through December 2020.)
and underlining wording related to virtual care.
|
These questions ask
about your own health care. This includes care you got in a
clinic, emergency room, doctor’s office, by telephone, or
by video appointments. Do not include care you got when you
stayed overnight in a hospital. Do not include the times you went
for dental care visits. Please answer the questions based on your
experience with the health plan you had from July through
December 2020.
|
21
|
Commenters
recommended adding the response options “Don’t know”
and “Not Applicable, I do not have a personal doctor”
to better distinguish among beneficiaries who may not have
contacted a personal doctor for care in the last 6 months.
One
commenter recommended changing “usual doctor or primary
care provider” to “personal doctor” to align
with other survey questions.
Commenters
noted that some enrollees may be confused as to whether to
include telehealth health appointments that required a follow up
in-person visit (such as bloodwork).
One
commenter recommended follow-up questions to gather information
as to whether the respondent had a video visit and the types of
visits received to further analyze responses based on the
appointment types. For example:
“In
the last 6 months, have you received any of the following types
of care?” Please select all that apply.
Came
in for an in-person visit
Had
a phone appointment (a scheduled time when a provider called
you)
Had
a video visit (you met with a provider by video using a camera
on your computer or mobile device)
Did not have a
visit or other care in the past 6 months
|
CMS
changed “usual doctor or primary care provider” to
“personal doctor”. To align with MCBS, CMS does not
recommend implementing additional changes to the question text.
CMS
added “Don’t know”, and “Not Applicable;
do not have a personal doctor” to the response scale. The
change in the response scale will allow CMS to distinguish
between whether enrollees were not offered telehealth services
or if enrollees did not seek out telehealth services.
Below
is the revised text and response options for Question 21:
In
the last 6 months, did your personal doctor offer telephone or
video appointments, so that you did not need to physically visit
their office or facility?
Yes
No
Don’t
know
Not
Applicable; do not have a personal doctor.
|
“Your Personal
Doctor” Section
|
|
CMS
added “or talk to” to the definition of a personal
doctor.
To
align with other instructions in the survey, CMS does not
recommend bolding or underlining wording related to telehealth.
Below
is the revised instruction language:
These
questions ask about your personal doctor. A personal doctor is
the one you would see or talk to if you need a check-up, want
advice about a health problem, or get sick or hurt. Please answer
the questions based on your experience with the health plan you
had from July through December 2020.
|
“Getting Health Care
from Specialists” Section
|
Commenter
recommended adding instructions to include telehealth in the
Getting Health
Care from Specialists section
instructions and bolding or underlining wording related to
virtual care.
Commenter
recommended alignment with language added to CAHPS surveys,
notably the CAHPS Health Plan Survey.
|
CMS
added instructions to include telephone and video appointments
to the Getting
Health Care from Specialist
section instructions.
To
align with other instructions in the survey, CMS does not
recommend bolding or underlining wording related to telehealth.
Below
is the revised instruction language:
Specialists
are doctors like surgeons, heart doctors, allergy doctors, skin
doctors, and other doctors who specialize in one area of health
care.
When
you answer the next questions, include
care you got in a clinic, emergency room, doctor’s office,
by telephone, or by video appointments. Do
not include dental visits or care you got when you stayed
overnight in a hospital.
|
44
|
“We
want to know your rating of the specialist you saw or
talked to
most often in the last 6 months. Using any number from 0 to 10,
where 0 is the worst specialist possible and 10 is the best
specialist possible, what number would you use to rate the
specialist?”
|
|
General Suggestions:
Survey-wide
|
|
Include in-person,
telephone, or video appointments.
|
General Suggestions:
Questions 25-27, 33, 37
|
Commenter
recommended only adding the instructions “include
in person, telephone, or video appointments”
to the section instructions as opposed to in the question text
to reduce the length of questions and repetition.
|
CMS
does not recommend removing the instructions from individual
questions to remind enrollees to include telehealth appointments
when answering the questions. Prior cognitive testing suggests
respondents need reminders to ensure accurate recall.
CMS also recommends
printing the instructions in italics to be consistent with the
survey instructions to not include dental care.
|
General Suggestions:
Questions 22-24, 28, &
41-42
|
Commenter
recommended removing sites of healthcare from the question (e.g.
in an emergency room, doctor’s office, or clinic) to
reduce confusion about whether to consider telehealth visits, as
well as in-person care.
Commenter
recommended only adding the instructions “include
in person, telephone, or video appointments”
to the section instructions as opposed to in the question text
to reduce the length of questions and repetition.
|
CMS
does not recommend removing the instructions from individual
questions to remind enrollees to include telehealth appointments
when answering the questions. Prior cognitive testing suggests
respondents need reminders to ensure accurate recall.
CMS
does not recommend modifying questions from the CAHPS Health
Plan Survey without cognitive and field testing.
|