Skip to main content

APTA's Physical Therapy Outcomes Registry (Registry) has been approved again by the US Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) as a qualified clinical data registry (QCDR). The designation for 2019 means that physical therapists (PTs) who participate in the Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) can submit their measures data directly from the Registry—including new measures supported by APTA that now position the Registry as the leading physical therapy registry in terms of the number of QCDR measures offered.

The approval comes as many PTs are facing a new reporting and payment world, the result of a CMS decision to include physical therapy in its Quality Payment Program (QPP) beginning in 2019. That program, with MIPS as its centerpiece, puts a heavy emphasis on outcomes reporting and ties that reporting to potential payment adjustments.

That's where the number of measures offered through the Registry comes into play. Basically, more measures mean more data points to report, and more data points mean more opportunities for PTs to meet CMS requirements—and possibly receive payment increases in the future. The Physical Therapy Outcomes Registry now offers more QCDR-related measures than any other physical therapy-only option.

According to Heather Smith, PT, MPH, APTA's director of quality, while the Registry's role in helping PTs comply with MIPS is important, it's far from the only benefit of the resource.

"With the Physical Therapy Outcomes Registry, APTA is looking forward, beyond MIPS data submission," Smith stated in an APTA news release. "Because the Registry gives users continual feedback on performance throughout the year, physical therapists can better understand their treatment patterns, interventions, and outcomes for specific patient populations, and apply that information to improve their practice. Ultimately, this will benefit the profession as a whole."

 


You Might Also Like...

Review

Employer Noncompete Restrictions Eliminated in New Rule

Apr 26, 2024

In a sweeping decision already facing legal challenges, the FTC prohibits most noncompete clauses "whether written or communicated orally."

News

CMS Issues Final Rule on SNF Minimum Staffing

Apr 24, 2024

Nursing homes will be required to provide at least 3.48 hours of daily nursing care per resident, per day.

News

CMS Delays Startup of Problematic Restrictions on Access to Research Data

Apr 24, 2024

The new policy, which faces strong opposition from researchers, will be put on hold while CMS reviews "comments and concerns."