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  • MIPS 2023—Quality: An Overview

    This content is excerpted from EyeNet’s MIPS 2023: A Primer and Reference; also see the Academy’s MIPS hub page.


    Default weighting in MIPS final score: 30%.  

    Performance period: Full calendar year.

    Performance requirements: 

    • Aim to report on at least six quality measures.
    • At least one of the six measures should be an outcome measure (or, if no outcome measure is available to you, another type of high-priority measure).
    • For each measure, you can score achievement points based on how your performance rate compares to a benchmark.

    Collection types: You can:

    Clinicians in small practices—but not large practices—can also report via Medicare Part B claims.

    Your quality score's contribution to your MIPS final score (0-100 points): If quality's weighting in your MIPS final score is 30%, that means it can contribute up to 30 points to that score. For example, a quality score of 50% would contribute 15 points to your MIPS final score. However, under certain circumstances, CMS may reweight your performance categories. For example, if you qualify for a promoting interoperability exception and if CMS is not able to score you on any cost measures, quality's weight would be increased to 50% if you are in a small practice and 85% if you are in a large practice.

    Previous: MVPs Versus "Traditional MIPS" 
    Next: MIPS 2023—Quality: Pick Your Collection Type  

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    All of the American Academy of Ophthalmology-developed quality measures are  copyrighted by the AAO’s H. Dunbar Hoskins Jr., MD, Center for Quality Eye Care (see terms of use).