Unsupported Browser
The American College of Surgeons website is not compatible with Internet Explorer 11, IE 11. For the best experience please update your browser.
Menu
Become a member and receive career-enhancing benefits

Our top priority is providing value to members. Your Member Services team is here to ensure you maximize your ACS member benefits, participate in College activities, and engage with your ACS colleagues. It's all here.

Become a Member
Become a member and receive career-enhancing benefits

Our top priority is providing value to members. Your Member Services team is here to ensure you maximize your ACS member benefits, participate in College activities, and engage with your ACS colleagues. It's all here.

Membership Benefits
ACS
Advocacy

New Approach to Surgical Measurement: Phases of Surgical Care

Surgical Phases of Care measures were developed by the American College of Surgeons (ACS) in 2015 for an episode-based approach to measurement, which is broadly applicable to all surgeons. This new framework to measure surgical care across the care continuum encompasses five phases:

  • Preoperative
  • Perioperative
  • Intraoperative
  • Postoperative
  • Postdischarge

These measures are intended to align with the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) of 2015 requirements by covering all phases of surgical care as a measure set . These measures have been developed based on variations in surgical care and are clinically relevant and meaningful to surgical care.


CMS Approves ACS Surgical Phases of Care Measures for MIPS 2017 Reporting

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has approved the Surgical Phases of Care (SPC) measures for implementation in the ACS Surgeon Specific Registry (SSR). The SPC measures are included as QCDR measures in the SSR and are now live for 2017 reporting of the Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS). More information about the inclusion of the SPC measures in the SSR can be found on the MIPS 2017 Quality Options through the SSR webpage.


The Problem with Current CMS MIPS Measures

The ACS firmly believes the current measure approach is narrow, complex, costly, and sluggish. The measures available to surgeons in the CMS MIPS are often irrelevant to surgical care because a single set of measures is very difficult to translate to an individual general surgeon due to the diversity of procedures general surgeons perform. Procedures vary from surgeon to surgeon based on their patient population, subspecialty, and geographical location. As a result, the current approach has likely slowed down the engagement of providers thereby hindering the ability to drive improvement.


New Approach to Measuring Surgical Care

The ACS believes that registry-based quality measures, which encompass five phases of surgical care: preoperative, perioperative, intraoperative, postoperative, and post-discharge, along with care coordination will be meaningful and important to both surgeons and surgical patients. Future work would expand further to consider patient engagement, shared decision making and patient reported outcomes.

Every surgical patient in each specialty walks through the phases of surgical care, and each phase involves key processes, critical care coordination with primary care physicians and anesthesia, including the technical side of surgical care that relates to safety, outcomes and preventing avoidable harms. As we move toward a value-based surgical care system, a framework that values these phases is required. These metrics are different from measures in MIPS because they broadly apply to almost all surgeons, span across the various phases of surgical care, and when measured together can have a real impact at the point of care.

The ACS has defined the following set of measures to span across the various phases of surgical care that align with a patient’s clinical flow. This framework broadly applies to surgical care for cross-cutting comparisons and was constructed to allow for more detailed, procedure-specific metrics to be added when necessary.

New for 2018, the ACS has incorporated patient-reported experience measures (PREs) also known as patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in the SPC measure set to advance the goals of high-quality, patient-centered surgical care. PREs represent the views and perceptions of patients, and are becoming widely recognized as important measures for use in improving patient care. PREs/PROs have also shown to enhance patient engagement and shared decision-making. The SPC PRE, the Surgical Phases of Care Patient Reported Outcome Composite, evaluates the patient’s experience regarding surgeon communication, the patient’s goals of care, satisfaction with the information provided, and post-operative care coordination.

Phases of surgical care measures:

  • Surgical Plan and Goals of Care (Preoperative Phase)
  • Identification of Major Co-Morbid Medical Conditions
  • Preventive Care and Screening: Tobacco Screening and Cessation Intervention
  • Preoperative Key Medications Review for Anticoagulation Medication
  • QPP 358: Patient-Centered Surgical Risk Assessment and Communication
  • Patient Frailty Evaluation
  • Participation in a National Risk-Adjusted Outcomes Surgical Registry
  • Perioperative Composite
  • Intraoperative Timeout Safety Checklist
  • Intraoperative Surgical Debriefing
  • Optimal Postoperative Communication Plan and Patient Care Coordination Composite
  • Resumption Protocol
  • Unplanned Reoperation within the 30 Day Postoperative Period
  • Unplanned Hospital Readmission within 30 Days of Principal Procedure
  • Surgical Site Infection (SSI)


Comment Letters

ACS Comment to the NQF MAP: Surgical Phases of Care
ACS Comment to CMS Measure Development Plan
ACS Comment to the National Quality Forum’s Measure Application Partnership (MQF MAP) Measures Under Consideration for 2017
ACS Comments to the Request for Information Regarding Implementation of the Merit-Based Incentive Payment System, Promotion of Alternative Payment Models, and Incentive Payments for Participation in Eligible Alternative Payment Models