Solventum™ Clinical Risk Groups (CRGs) Classification System
Solventum™ Clinical Risk Groups (CRGs) Classification System can be used both to predict future health care utilization and cost and explain past health care utilization and cost. Solventum CRGs are a population classification system that uses inpatient and ambulatory diagnosis and procedure codes, pharmaceutical data and functional health status to assign each individual to a single, severity-adjusted group.
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All about Solventum CRGs
The Solventum Clinical Risk Groups classification methodology describes the health status and burden of illness of individuals in an identified population. The optional Solventum Functional Status Groups (FSG) methodology supplements Solventum CRGs when individuals have limitations in performing the activities of daily living.
As a clinically credible and robust measure of individual and population health status, Solventum CRGs can be used by healthcare regulators, payers, managed care organizations, hospitals, disease management and similar firms, researchers from academic and government organizations, and anyone else who seeks to understand or manage population-wide patterns of utilization, cost and quality.
Here are a few examples of how the Solventum CRG methodology can bring value to customers:
- Case mix adjustment in capitation payment. Solventum CRG build the foundation for fair payment to managed care organizations and other entities responsible for population health management. Because Solventum CRG are clinically based, they link the clinical and financial aspects of care. Since 2008, New York Medicaid has used Solventum CRG to adjust for case mix in managed care organization (MCO) capitation rates.
- Risk adjustment in quality measurement and payment incentives. An increasing number of commercial and Medicaid payers measure the performance of managed care organizations, primary care practices and other entities by using Solventum's Potentially Preventable Admissions, Potentially Preventable Emergency Department Visits, and/or Potentially Preventable Services. Adjustment for differences in population health status is essential and done using Solventum CRGs.
- Tracking disease progression. Solventum researchers published an analysis showing how incentives could be created to reward MCOs that do a good job managing the progression of chronic diseases over time. Separately, the Health Quality Council of Alberta used Solventum CRG to measure the progression of diabetes in the provincial population.
- Understanding pediatric health status. Solventum CRGs are a common measure of health status for children with complex health needs, as evidenced by multiple studies published in peer-reviewed journals.
- Patient alerts at the point of care. During an office visit, some clinicians in New York state can see a dashboard that shows a patient’s current and previous Solventum CRG assignment, recent potentially preventable events and identification if the patient has "persistent high needs."
- Defining episodes. Solventum CRGs are used in defining episodes of care in the Solventum™ Patient-focused Episodes (PFE) Software.
Solventum CRG grouping logic is the same for every user, although different organizations may use different versions (the most recent version is recommended). Each user makes their own decisions about appropriate use, including population profiling, risk adjustment and capitation rate formulas and amounts. At this time, Solventum does not offer software that emulates Solventum CRG assignment and pricing used by specific payers.
Solventum CRGs are integrated with the other Solventum patient classification methodologies:
Functional Status Groups (FSGs) can be combined with Solventum CRGs to more fully describe the health status of individuals who face challenges in activities of daily living. Solventum FSGs use data from the Medicare Minimum Data Set, OASIS or IRS-PAI assessment instruments to assign individuals to one of nine FSGs. Solventum CRG software including FSG are licensed and provided together.
Solventum™ Population-focused Preventables (PFP) Software uses Solventum CRGs to risk adjust the incidence of PFPs across different populations, so that comparisons fairly reflect differences in population health status. The three PFPs are Potentially Preventable Admissions (PPAs), Potentially Preventable Emergency Department Visits (PPVs) and Potentially Preventable Services (PPSs).
Solventum™ Patient-focused Episodes (PFE) Software incorporates Solventum CRG information both to help define population episodes and measure a patient’s chronic disease burden at the beginning of an episode.
The Solventum CRG Software is also at work in several Solventum products, including:
- Solventum™ Core Grouping Software (CGS)
- Solventum™ Grouper Plus Content Services (GPCS)
- Solventum™ Data-to-Action Solution
Licensees of the Solventum CRG methodology can access the following documents on the Solventum customer support website:
- Solventum CRG Methodology Overview
- Solventum CRG Definitions Manual
- Summary of Changes for Solventum CRG v2.1
- Solventum CRG Relative Weights (Excel spreadsheet)
- Solventum CRG Installation and User Manual (technical guide)
The unit of analysis is a person eligible for health care coverage. All data required to assign a Solventum CRG are routinely collected by standard claims processing systems. Required data come from institutional and professional claims, i.e., the UB-04 and CMS-1500 paper forms and their corresponding X12N 837 electronic formats. When available, pharmacy data in NCPDP format are desirable.
The development of the Solventum Clinical Risk Groups was greatly influenced by the success of Medicare payment for inpatient hospital care using the Diagnosis Related Groups (DRGs), first implemented in 1983. While the DRG unit of analysis is an inpatient hospital stay, the Solventum CRG unit of analysis is an individual within an identified population. Like DRGs, the Solventum CRG methodology comprises a comprehensive set of mutually exclusive and clinically coherent groups. A fundamental distinction between the two methodologies is that DRGs classify a single encounter at a point in time while Solventum CRGs classify the individual and all of his or her health care services within an extended period of time.
A second distinction is that DRGs are assigned after the services are provided, that is, retrospectively. On the other hand, Solventum CRGs can be used either prospectively or retrospectively. Prospectively, the Solventum CRG assignment is used to predict health care utilization costs for a period that has yet to occur. Retrospectively, the Solventum CRGs are used to risk adjust for health care utilization and costs for the period that has just finished. Solventum CRGs provide health care planners, managers and clinicians a meaningful basis for evaluating both the processes of care, the outcomes and the associated financial impacts.
As a categorical clinical model, Solventum CRGs differ from most other population risk-adjustment methodologies, which are statistical methods developed with regression analysis. Regression models produce a numeric score for each individual, but this score has minimal communication and management value. Regression models can do a good job explaining the past, but they do a poor job giving clinicians and managers actionable information needed to improve the future.
Solventum first released Solventum CRGs in 2000. The methodology was published in the prestigious journal Medical Care in 2004. In 2006, the U.S. government awarded Solventum a patent for Solventum CRGs. In 2008, New York state adopted Solventum CRG for use in calculating capitation payment rates to Medicaid managed care organizations (MCOs). Solventum CRG v2.0 was released in 2016, and CRG v2.1 in 2018. In v2.1, there are 392 base CRG groups and approximately 1,470 total risk groups including severity levels (the count differs slightly depending on the prospective or retrospective models). For example, Solventum CRG 70602 is used for a person with congestive heart failure, diabetes and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The first digit indicates that this person is in Health Status Group 7, Dominant Chronic Disease in Three or More Organ Systems. There are nine Health Status Groups, ranging from group 1 (healthy/nonuser) to group 9 for catastrophic conditions such as renal dialysis and major organ transplants. The next three digits (060) indicate that this patient has the combination of heart failure, diabetes and COPD, and may have other conditions as well. The final digit (2) indicates that of all the people in base Solventum CRG 7060, this individual is severity 2. For most chronic base Solventum CRGs, there are four or six severity levels.
For each Solventum CRG, a relative weight indicates the typical health care costs for this Solventum CRG relative to the average individual in the population (given the benefits covered, utilization levels and payer policies). For example, Solventum calculated a Solventum CRG 70602 relative weight of 8.1364, indicating that individuals in this are about eight times more expensive than average. We should note that Solventum CRG licensees are responsible for choosing or calculating Solventum CRG relative weights are appropriate for their population and purpose. (Solventum consultants are available to assist licensees with Solventum CRG analysis.)
With as many as 1,470 individual Solventum CRGs compared with as few as nine Health Status Groups, Solventum CRGs are a very flexible tool. To enable analysts and other licensees to fit the Solventum CRG methodology to their specific needs, Solventum provides three levels of aggregated Solventum CRGs (ACRGs). Each level provides fewer categories while maintaining key clinical detail and severity information.
The Solventum CRG clinical logic is maintained by a team of Solventum clinicians, data analysts, nosologists, programmers and economists. The logic is proprietary to Solventum but is available for licensees to view in an online definitions manual. The methodology is updated annually to reflect changes in the standard diagnosis and procedure code sets as well as Solventum enhancements to the Solventum CRG clinical logic.