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Navigating MIPS Quality Measures:
What Inpatient Providers Need to Know for 2026

What Are MIPS Quality Measures?

The 7 Types of Quality Measures

1. Process Measures

2. Outcome Measures

These track the actual health results of your patients. 

Example: Measure 398, Optimal Asthma Control. 

Did the patient’s asthma improve? 

Outcome measures earn you two bonus points automatically, so they’re worth prioritizing if you can report on them.

3. Intermediate Outcomes Measures

These track short-term health states that contribute to long-term outcomes. 

Example: Measure 236, Controlling High Blood Pressure. 

It’s not the final outcome (avoiding stroke or heart attack), but it’s a step toward it.

4. Patient-Reported Outcome Measures

The patient tells you how they’re doing. 

Example: Measure 375, Functional Status Assessment for Total Knee Replacement. 

These are becoming more common as CMS pushes for patient-centered care.

5. Efficiency Measures

These track whether you’re using clinical resources appropriately. 

Example: Measure 439, Age Appropriate Screening Colonoscopy. 

Are you screening the right patients at the right intervals?

Efficiency measures can also support your Cost category score, so they offer value in more than one place.

6. Structure Measures

These track whether you have systems in place to support high-quality care. 

Example: Measure 225, Radiology Reminder System for Screening Mammograms. 

Some structure measures can be automated through your EHR, which makes them simpler to complete.

7. High-Priority Measures

CMS defines certain measures as particularly meaningful for improving patient outcomes or efficiency. These don’t earn bonus points like outcome measures, but they highlight areas CMS views as clinically significant.

Why the Measures Type Matters

Choosing the Right Quality Measures

The measure list changes every year, but your approach should stay the same. Rather than trying to navigate the full CMS measure list, focus on picking the measures that make sense for how your practice runs. Your choices can be the difference between a strong Quality score and a weak one.

Here’s what to weigh:

Start With What You're Already Doing

Don’t pick measures that require you to change your clinical workflows or track new data. Look at what you’re already documenting and find measures that align with your current practice patterns. If you’re already screening for diabetes complications, there’s probably a measure for that. If you’re managing chronic heart failure patients, pick measures tied to that population.

Prioritize Outcome Measures

You need at least one outcome measure to meet the reporting requirements, and outcome measures earn two bonus points. If you can report on multiple outcome measures without compromising your score in other areas, do it. Just make sure you’re confident you’ll perform well on them; benchmarks for outcome measures can be tough.

Consider Measure Applicability

Some measures only apply to specific patient populations. If you don’t see enough eligible patients to meet the case minimum (typically 20 patients), that measure won’t work for you. Check the denominator criteria before committing to a measure.

Look for Structure Measures You Can Automate

If your EHR can auto-populate data for structure measures, those are straightforward options that don’t require additional documentation. Examples include reminder systems, clinical decision support tools, or patient registry participation. These measures often take no additional time to complete once they’re set up in your system.

Avoid Measures You'll Score Poorly On

This may be obvious, but it’s worth saying: don’t pick measures where you know your performance is weak unless you’re actively working to improve in that area. MIPS scoring is based on benchmarks. If the 90th percentile for a measure is 95% and you’re at 75%, you’re losing points.

Specialty Measure Sets

CMS publishes optional sets that group measures by specialty. These aren’t mandatory, but they simplify selection by narrowing your options to those most relevant to your work. If a specialty set exists for your field and includes at least six measures, you can report the full set instead of choosing measures individually.

Some specialties have robust measure sets with 10+ options, while others have only a few. Specialty sets are optional; you can always mix and match individual measures instead, especially if the set doesn’t align well with your patient population.

For inpatient providers: Most specialty sets are designed for outpatient-focused fields such as cardiology, dermatology, or orthopedics. If you’re a hospitalist or primarily work in inpatient settings, you’ll likely be selecting individual measures rather than relying on a specialty set.

How to Report MIPS Quality Measures in 2026

Once you’ve selected your measures, you’ll need to choose how to report them. Your reporting path depends on your EHR setup, practice size, and whether you’re working with a registry.

eCQMs (Electronic Clinical Quality Measures): Pulled directly from your EHR. Highly structured and often the strongest option if your EHR supports them and your data quality is reliable.

MIPS CQMs: More flexible than eCQMs and compatible with EHRs, registries, or even paper workflows. Solid fallback if eCQMs aren’t available.

QCDR (Qualified Clinical Data Registry): Created by CMS-approved registries and tailored to specific specialties. Often the best fit for specialists using a registry.

Medicare Part B Claims: Limited to very small practices and only covers Medicare patients. Fewer measures use this pathway each year.

Submission Methods

You can report through Medicare Part B claims (if eligible), upload data in the QPP portal, or have your EHR or registry submit via API. Most practices choose registry or API submission because these options reduce manual work and improve accuracy.

General Reporting Requirements

How Quality Measures Impact Your Payment

Quality often feels like the most demanding part of MIPS, and there’s a reason for that. This category has a larger financial impact, so the highs and lows show up more clearly in your payment adjustment. Measures supported by complete data and consistent performance tend to lift your results, while weaker areas make a clearer dent here than in the other parts of MIPS. Breaking down how CMS scores each measure can help you focus your efforts where they matter most.

Performance Rate

Your consistency becomes part of your bottom line. CMS looks at how reliably you meet each clinical goal across eligible patients. CMS looks at how reliably you meet each clinical goal across eligible patients. Your performance rate is calculated using a numerator and denominator: the denominator is your full eligible patient population for that measure, and the numerator is the subset that met the performance goal. For example, if you have 100 eligible patients for a diabetes screening measure and 90 of them were screened, your performance rate is 90%.

Data Completeness

If the data isn’t complete, you leave money on the table. CMS requires that most eligible patients be included in each measure. Missing data can reduce your score even when your performance rate is high, limiting your ability to earn full credit.

Case Minimums

Low patient volume can limit your scoring potential. Most measures require at least 20 cases to qualify for full scoring. If you fall below that threshold, CMS may cap the score, which can bring down your overall payment impact.

Benchmark Availability

Your score depends on how you compare to clinicians nationwide. CMS compares your performance rate to all other providers who reported the same measure. If the benchmark at the 90th percentile is 95%, you may need to hit 95% or higher to earn the full 10 points for that measure. If you score 80%, you may earn fewer points based on where that rate falls within the distribution. Benchmarks vary by measure and shift year to year, which means the difficulty of earning full points changes along with them. That shift has a direct effect on your final payment.

Best Practices for Better Quality Performance

Select Measures Strategically

Pick measures where you already perform well and have strong documentation. If you know your screening rates are high or your chronic disease management is solid, choose measures that reflect that. Don’t pick measures where you’re consistently below benchmark unless you’re actively working to improve in that area.

Optimize Your Submission Method

Assess your EHR capabilities before committing to a collection type. If your system supports eCQMs and the data quality is reliable, that’s often your strongest option. If not, a registry like Patient360 can handle the submission logistics and reduce the administrative burden on your team.

Document Everything

CMS can audit your MIPS data. Keep source documentation for every measure you report, including how you calculated performance rates, which patients were included in the denominator, and any exclusions you applied. If you can’t validate your data during an audit, CMS may adjust or remove the measure from your score.

Review Year-to-Year Changes

CMS updates the quality measure inventory annually. Measures get retired, benchmarks shift, and new measures get added. Review the final rule each year to confirm your planned measures still exist and check if reporting requirements have changed.

Align Measures with Clinical Workflows

Integrate quality measure tracking into your existing workflows rather than treating it as a separate reporting task. If your team is already documenting care coordination or chronic disease management, build measure reporting into those same processes. This reduces duplicate work and improves data accuracy.

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