Pathology/Lab Coding Alert

Audit Proof:

7 Tips Safeguard Your MIPS Data

Secure documentation for six years.

If you’re involved in Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) attestation for your pathology practice, you need to be ready for an audit if it comes your way.

Pitfall: CMS can ask for up to six years’ worth of post-payment documentation — which may be hard to keep track of, especially as data registries evolve, performance measures update, and certified EHR technology (CEHRT) changes.

Help is here: We’ve gleaned seven tips from expert sources to help you prepare for a MIPS audit.

Master Your Documentation

You can take several steps to make sure you have adequate documentation to defend against an audit. Here are five suggestions from Cherie Kelly-Aduli, CEO of QPP Consulting Group in Mandeville, Louisiana and a MedAxiom consultant, in a MedAxiom blog post:

1. Use QPP resources: CMS offers strict advice on Improvement Activities’ data validation in the Quality Payment Program (QPP) resource library. “Prepare your documentation accordingly,” Kelly-Aduli cautions.

2. Copy documentation: Make copies of your Quality data generated by your EHR. The information may be needed to show that you submitted your measures through the CMS-approved registry vendor, she stresses.

3. Print reports: The Promoting Interoperability (PI) category is now front and center with CMS pinning so many policies to health IT. “Print a report from your Certified EHR of the measures with numerator and denominator calculations for each of your providers,” Kelly-Aduli advises. “The report should include the EHR vendor logo and the timeframe of which you are attesting.”

4. Take screenshots: For your Quality measures, “take a screenshot of your Quality scores from a report generated by your EHR,” advises Kelly-Aduli. You should also take a screenshot of measures met through patient interaction, too.

5. Record and manage risk assessments. Back up your PI Security Assessment with strong documentation that you performed an annual risk assessment. This measure is the most audited MIPS measure, Kelly-Aduli warns.

Use Your Vendors

You’re not in this alone, so make sure you put your vendors in your corner to document your MIPS data.

Tip 6: One of the unique challenges of the six-year time frame is that software editions can be retired. That can create obstacles if you must pull data from your electronic health record (EHR) or other platform, warns Lora Woltz, ONC HIT certification manager, in an April 25 webinar, “Bulletproofing the MIPS Audit File.” Due to this complexity, “you very well could be relying on your vendors to help you gather the information you need,” she says.

Tip 7: Don’t forget to document your vendor interaction thoroughly. CMS refers to these vendors as “third party intermediaries,” and they include “qualified registry vendors, qualified clinical data registry vendors, health IT or EHR vendors, and survey vendors,” notes the Texas Medical Association MIPS audit guidance. Your vendors must keep their own records separate from their interactions with your practice to participate in MIPS, and they can be audited, too.