The Department of Health and Human Services is the Federal government's principal agency for protecting the health of all Americans and providing essential human services, especially to those who are least able to help themselves.
Not Applicable.
Uses and Use Restrictions
The funds shall be used to implement models that support system transformation toward higher quality care at lower costs, and to plan and develop complementary payment models.
Award dollars may be used for specific components, devices, equipment, software, analytical tools, or personnel provided that are integrated into the service delivery and payment model.
Award dollars cannot be used to make permanent improvements to property not owned by the federal government; minor alterations and renovations are permissible under certain circumstances that will be described in the Financial Plan template (to be provided on or about June 14, 2013 on the Innovation Center website at http://innovation.cms.gov).
CMS will not fund proposals that duplicate models that CMS is currently testing in other initiatives (see Section I.4) or other proposals being investigated elsewhere in HHS.
CMS will not fund the provision of services to non-CMS beneficiaries.
CMS will not fund applicants that cannot monitor, self-evaluate, and report on the progress and impact of their model in a timely manner.
In Round Two, CMS will not fund models that focus primarily on acute hospital inpatient care.
All equipment, staff, other budgeted resources, and expenses must be used exclusively for the project identified in the awardee s original cooperative agreement application or agreed upon subsequently with HHS, and may not be used for any prohibited uses.
.
Award dollars cannot be used
• For specific components, devices, equipment, software, or personnel that are not integrated into the entire service delivery and payment model proposal.
• To match any other Federal funds.
• To provide services, equipment, or supports that are the legal responsibility of another party under Federal or State law (e.g., vocational rehabilitation or education services) or under any civil rights laws.
Such legal responsibilities include, but are not limited to, modifications of a workplace or other reasonable accommodations that are a specific obligation of the employer or other party.
• To supplant existing State, local, or private funding of infrastructure or services, such as staff salaries, etc.
• To be used by local entities to satisfy state matching requirements.
• To pay for the use of specific components, devices, equipment, or personnel that are not integrated into the entire service delivery and payment model proposal.
Award dollars cannot be used for specific components, devices, equipment, or personnel that are not integrated into the entire service delivery and payment model proposal.
CMS will not fund proposals that replicate models that CMS is currently testing in other initiatives.
Finally, given the breadth of models that could be submitted, CMS will not fund proposals that cannot monitor, evaluate, and report on the progress and impact of their program in a timely manner.
Funding Restrictions - Indirect Costs
• Indirect costs will be capped at 20% or the applicant s Federally negotiated indirect cost rate or the applicant s provisional rate, whichever of these is lowest.
Applicants may elect to waive their Federally negotiated indirect cost rate.
If requesting indirect costs, a Federally negotiated Indirect Cost Rate Agreement will be required.
Funding Restrictions - Direct Services
• Cooperative Agreement funds may not be used to provide individuals with services that are already funded through Medicare, Medicaid and/or CHIP.
In compliance with the OMB Circulars, which define allowed cost, funding from the Innovation Center may not supplant funding for services that are currently authorized through the Medicaid State Plan.
This also applies to funding provided through waivers or other grants, including federal grants.
Travel or participation in conferences may require CMS approval.
Funding Restrictions - Reimbursement of Pre-Award Costs
• No cooperative agreement funds awarded under this solicitation may be used to reimburse pre-award costs.
The following standard requirements apply to applications and awards under this FOA:
• Specific administrative requirements, as outlined in 2 CFR Part 225 and 45 CFR Part 92, apply to cooperative agreement awarded under this announcement.
• All awardees under this project must comply with all applicable Federal statutes relating to nondiscrimination including, but not limited to:
o Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
o Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973,
o The Age Discrimination Act of 1975,
o Hill-Burton Community Service nondiscrimination provisions, and
o Title II Subtitle A of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.
The funds shall be used to implement and evaluate models that support system transformation toward higher quality of care at lower costs.
Award dollars cannot be used for specific components, devices, equipment, or personnel that are not integrated into the entire service delivery and payment model proposal.
CMS will not fund proposals that replicate models that CMS is currently testing in other initiatives.
Finally, given the breadth of models that could be submitted, CMS will not fund proposals that cannot monitor, evaluate, and report on the progress and impact of their program in a timely manner.
The following standard requirements apply to applications and awards under this FOA:
• Specific administrative requirements, as outlined in 2 CFR Part 225 and 45 CFR Part 92, apply to cooperative agreement awarded under this announcement.
• All awardees under this project must comply with all applicable Federal statutes relating to nondiscrimination including, but not limited to:
o Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
o Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973,
o The Age Discrimination Act of 1975,
o Hill-Burton Community Service nondiscrimination provisions, and
o Title II Subtitle A of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990,
• All equipment, staff, other budgeted resources, and expenses must be used exclusively for the project identified in the awardee s original cooperative agreement application or agreed upon subsequently with HHS, and may not be used for any prohibited uses.
Prohibited Uses of Cooperative Agreement Funds
• To match any other Federal funds.
• To provide services, equipment, or supports that are the legal responsibility of another party under Federal or State law (e.g., vocational rehabilitation or education services) or under any civil rights laws.
Such legal responsibilities include, but are not limited to, modifications of a workplace or other reasonable accommodations that are a specific obligation of the employer or other party.
• To supplant existing State, local, or private funding of infrastructure or services, such as staff salaries, etc.
• To be used by local entities to satisfy State matching requirements.
• To pay for the use of specific components, devices, equipment, or personnel that are not integrated into the entire service delivery and payment model proposal.
Eligibility Requirements
Applicant Eligibility
Round One of HCIA sought to attract a wide variety of health care innovators and organizations, including: provider groups, health systems, payers and other private sector organizations, faith-based organizations, local governments, and public-private partnerships.
In addition, certain organizations (such as professional associations) were eligible to apply as conveners - assembling and coordinating the efforts of a group of participants.
Conveners could serve as facilitators or could be direct award recipients.
States were not eligible to apply to HCIA Round One.
HCIA Round Two seeks to engage with a wide variety of innovators.
Welcome to apply are interested parties that meet the eligibility requirements specified in the Funding Opportunity Announcement, have developed innovations that will drive significant improvement in population health, quality of care, and total cost of care, and can create a clear pathway to an alternate payment model based on their innovation.
Examples of the types of organizations expected to apply are: provider groups, health systems, payers and other private sector organizations, faith-based organizations, state and/or local governments, territories or possessions, academic institutions, research organizations, public-private partnerships, and for-profit organizations.
By "state," we refer to the definition provided under 45 CFR 74.2 as "any of the several States of the U.S., the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, (or) any territory or possession of the U.S." By "territory or possession," we mean Guam, the U.S.
Virgin Islands, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.
In addition, certain organizations may apply as conveners that assemble and coordinate the efforts of a group of participants.
Unsuccessful applicants from prior CMS funding competitions are eligible to apply.
Technology-based models need to reflect the actual use, not the development, of a product in a broader service delivery or payment model.
For specific details on eligibility, see the Funding Opportunity Announcement at https://www.grantsolutions.gov/gs/preaward/previewPublicAnnouncement.do?id=17996.
Beneficiary Eligibility
The Health Care Innovation Awards initiative will fund applicants who propose the most compelling new service delivery and payment models that will drive system transformation and deliver better outcomes for Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP beneficiaries. Proposals should be focused on innovative approaches to improving health and lowering costs for high risk/high opportunity populations, including Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP beneficiaries. In Round Two, proposals should focus, in particular, on beneficiary care and payment in the four Innovation Categories described under the heading, "Objectives (050)," above.
Round Two of the Innovation Awards encourages a strong focus on Medicaid and CHIP populations. However, CMS recognizes that in order for providers to have meaningful incentives to change their service delivery models they must engage multiple payers. Therefore, applications must include a feasible approach for securing participation of multiple payers for their proposed models. This could include demonstrable commitments from current payer partners, current contracts, letters of support or commitment from private insurers, state governments, or local governments. Preference will be given to applications that include participation by non-CMS payers at the outset of the model s implementation. Funding from CMS can only be used to provide care for beneficiaries of Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP.
For specific details, see the Funding Opportunity Announcement at https://www.grantsolutions.gov/gs/preaward/previewPublicAnnouncement.do?id=17996.
Credentials/Documentation
Applicants should review the solicitation criteria to determine the required documentation. OMB Circular No. A-87 applies to this program. OMB Circular No. A-87 applies to this program.
Aplication and Award Process
Preapplication Coordination
Preapplication coordination is not applicable.
Environmental impact information is not required for this program.
This program is excluded from coverage under E.O.
12372.
Application Procedures
OMB Circular No. A-102 applies to this program. OMB Circular No. A-110 applies to this program. For HCIA Round Two, Letters of Intent to Apply must be received by 3:00 pm Eastern Daylight Time on June 28, 2013. Failure to submit a Letter of Intent to Apply will disqualify the application from that organization from being reviewed. The information specified for the Letter of Intent to Apply must be provided through an online form. In addition to required Standard Forms, as described in the Funding Opportunity Announcement, applications for HCIA Round Two should include a Cover Letter (to be enclosed with the project narrative), a Project Abstract, and a Project Narrative that includes the following sections:
• Model Design.
• Organizational Capacity.
• Return on Investment, which should include a Financial Plan signed by the chief financial officer of the applicant organization, a Model Sustainability Plan, and-if $10 million or more is requested-an Actuarial Review. Applicants requesting less than $10 million are encouraged but not required to submit an external actuarial review.
• Monitoring, Reporting, and Evaluation.
• Funding and Sustainability, including a Budget Narrative that gives a yearly breakdown of costs for the 3-year model period.
• Supplementary Materials, including an Operational Plan, an Executive Overview, and documentation related to financial projections, profiles of participating organizations, relevant letters of endorsement, etc.
For more detail about application requirements, including required registrations and the format, size, structure, and content of the application package, consult the Funding Opportunity Announcement, available online at https://www.grantsolutions.gov/gs/preaward/previewPublicAnnouncement.do?id=17996.
Award Procedures
There are a number of differences between the criteria and review processes for Round One and Round Two of the HCIA. In Round One, the Innovation Center made 107 awards ranging from approximately $1 million to $26.5 million for a three-year period. Cooperative agreements were awarded with consideration to: (1) available funding; (2) geographic diversity; and (3) the quality of each application and the ability to meet the goals of the project. In the first round, less than 5% percent of applications were funded. Profiles of Awardees are available on the CMS website at http://innovation.cms.gov/
The CMS Innovation Center announced cooperative agreements for Round One of HCIA in two batches, with the first batch of awardees for Round One of HCIA announced on May 8, 2012 and the second (final) batch for Round One announced on June 15, 2012. Applications in Round One were scored with a total of 100 points available. The following criteria were used to evaluate Round One applications received in response to this solicitation.
Round One Criteria
Design of Project (30 points)
Organizational Capacity and Management Plan (25 points)
Workforce Goals (15 points)
Budget, Budget Narrative, Financial Plan and Sustainability (20 points)
Evaluation and Reporting (10 points)
In Round Two, applications will be scored with a total of 100 points available. The following criteria will be used to evaluate applications received in response to this solicitation.
Round Two Criteria
Design of Proposed Model (25 points)
Organizational Capacity and Management Plan (25 points)
Return on Investment (20 points)
Budget, Budget Narrative, and Model Sustainability (20 points)
Monitoring and Reporting (10 points)
For specific details about criteria for evaluation being used for Round Two of the initiative, see the Funding Opportunity Announcement at https://www.grantsolutions.gov/gs/preaward/previewPublicAnnouncement.do?id=17996.
Review Process: A team consisting of HHS staff from outside CMMI and other outside experts will review all eligible applications. The review process will include the following steps:
• Prior to submission of the application to the review panel, a preliminary eligibility screen will be conducted by CMS staff or CMS contractors to ensure that the technical requirements of the application are met.
• Applications will be screened again to determine eligibility for further review using criteria detailed in this solicitation and in applicable law, including 2 CFR Parts 180 and 376.
• The review panel will assess each application to determine the merits of the proposal and the extent to which the proposed model furthers the purposes of Health Care Innovation Awards Round Two. Reviewers will award points in each area to determine scores. CMS reserves the right to request that applicants revise or otherwise modify their proposals and budget based on the recommendations of the panel.
• Concurrently, the CMS Office of the Actuary will assist the GMO in review of the reasonableness of the estimated cost to the government, and will review the potential for federal savings. This review will be one of the criteria for the CMS Approving Official to consider during the application review process. The CMS Approving Official may utilize information provided by the CMS Actuary s assessment of applicants potential for savings in determining award recipients.
• The results of the objective review of the applications by qualified experts will be used to advise the CMS Approving Official. Final award decisions will be made by the CMS Approving Official, guided by recommendations of the review panel and by programmatic concerns.
CMS intends to fund models in communities with a wide variety of geographic and socio- economic characteristics, including underserved urban and rural areas. CMS reserves the right to approve or deny any or all proposals for funding. Note that section 1115A of the Social Security Act states that there is no administrative or judicial review under sections 1869 or 1878 of the Act for the selection of organizations, sites, or participants to test models under section 1115A of the Act.
Interviews may be conducted with applicants prior to selection in order to clarify Application and Submission Information as needed. CMS reserves the right to request that applicants revise or otherwise modify their proposals and budget based on the recommendations of the panel and the review of the CMS Approving Official. Successful applicants will receive one cooperative agreement award issued under this announcement. Unsuccessful applicants may request reviewer s comments.
For specific details about the Review Process for Round Two of the initiative, see the Funding Opportunity Announcement at https://www.grantsolutions.gov/gs/preaward/previewPublicAnnouncement.do?id=17996.
The Announcement and Award dates for Round Two are:
Funding Opportunity Announcement: May 15, 2013
Anticipated Awardee Announcements: Phase 1 - January 15, 2014; Phase 2 - January 31, 2014
Anticipated Notice of Cooperative Agreement Award: Phase 1 and Phase 2 - February 28, 2014
Award Notices for Round Two of the HCIA: The Authorized Official of successful applicants will receive an electronic Notice of Award (NoA) signed and dated by the CMS Grants Management Officer that will set forth the amount of the award and other pertinent information. The award will also include standard Terms and Conditions, and may also include additional specific cooperative agreement terms and conditions. Potential applicants should be aware that special requirements could apply to cooperative agreement awards based on the particular circumstances of the effort to be supported and/or deficiencies identified in the application by the review panel. The NoA is the legal document issued to notify the awardee that an award has been made and that funds may be requested from the HHS payment system. Any communication between CMS and awardees prior to issuance of the NoA is not an authorization to begin performance of a model.
Unsuccessful applicants will be notified by letter, sent through the U.S. Postal Service to the applicant organization as listed on its SF 424, within 30 days of announcement of Notices of Award.
The award procedures for Round Two are revised versions of those stipulated for Round One. For more details, see the Funding Opportunity Announcement at https://www.grantsolutions.gov/gs/preaward/previewPublicAnnouncement.do?id=17996.
Deadlines
Jun 28, 2013 to Aug 15, 2013 The deadlines for Round One were: Required Letter of Intent was due: December 19, 2011. Proposals for Round One were due: January 27, 2012.
The deadlines for Round Two are: Required Letter of Intent Due Date: June 28, 2013, by 3:00 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time Application Due Date: August 15, 2013, by 3:00 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time.
Authorization
Section 1115A of the Social Security Act (added by Section 3021 of the Affordable Care Act).
Range of Approval/Disapproval Time
For Round One:
The CMS Innovation Center announced cooperative agreements for Round One of HCIA in two batches, with the first batch of awardees for Round One of HCIA announced on May 8, 2012 and the second (final) batch for Round One announced on June 15, 2012.
For Round Two:
Anticipated Notice of Cooperative Agreement Award: Phase 1 and Phase 2 - February 28, 2014.
Appeals
CMS reserves the right to approve or deny any or all proposals for funding. Note that section 3021 of the Affordable Care Act establishes title XI, section 1115A of the Social Security Act, which creates the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovations (CMMI). Section 1115A(d)(2) states that there is no administrative or judicial review of the selection of organizations, sites, or participants to test models.
Renewals
Not Applicable.
Assistance Considerations
Formula and Matching Requirements
This program has no statutory formula.
This program has no matching requirements. N/A.
This program does not have MOE requirements. No MOE Requirements.
Length and Time Phasing of Assistance
For Round One, the anticipated period of performance for the 3-year project period is July 1, 2012 through June 30, 2015.
For Round Two, the anticipated period of performance for the 3-year model period is April 1, 2014 to March 31, 2017. The budget period is 12 months. See the following for information on how assistance is awarded/released: Awards will be made through Cooperative Agreements.
Post Assistance Requirements
Reports
The reporting requirements for Round Two differ in some respects from Round One s reporting requirements.
Round One applicants were expected to include in their proposals a description of their plans for collecting and producing the data and analysis of the model that would be provided to CMS and its evaluation and monitoring contractors.
Careful monitoring and reporting of the effect of the model on the quality of care received as well as health care outcomes and costs are expected.
Awardees agreed to cooperate with any Federal evaluation of the program and provide quarterly, semi-annual (every 6 months), annual, and final (at the end of the cooperative agreement period) reports in a form prescribed by CMS, and submitted electronically.
These reports outline how cooperative agreement funds are used, describe program progress, and describe any barriers encountered and measurable outcomes.
CMS provides the format for program reporting and the technical assistance necessary to complete required report forms.
Awardees also agreed to respond to requests for information necessary for the evaluation of national efforts and for data on key elements of their own cooperative agreement activities.
For Round Two, the application must include a description of the applicant s plan for collecting and producing the data and analysis of the model that will be provided to CMS and its evaluation and monitoring contractors.
The application must include detailed information on the self-monitoring plan.
Careful monitoring and reporting of the effect of the model on the quality of care received as well as health care outcomes and costs are expected.
Awardees also will be required to monitor patient satisfaction with their care experience by using validated tools that measure the patient experience of care.
Monitoring reports must be provided to CMS quarterly and they must include information on the use of cooperative agreement funding and an assessment of model implementation, lessons learned, patient experience, quality improvements, clinical outcomes, and estimates of cost savings.
Note that awardees will also be required to cooperate fully with the monitoring and evaluation contractors in reporting data that they require for the model evaluations.
CMS plans to conduct rigorous evaluation of each of these models through a separate evaluation contract.
This work will entail establishing treatment and control or comparison groups and measuring the model effects on costs and outcomes.
Applicants will be expected to facilitate evaluation contractor work in these areas by providing all necessary information and access required for the evaluation.
Awardees may be required to report information in standard format and measure and report outcomes in a standardized way, if requested by the evaluation contractor.
Awardees will be measured and monitored on their ability to execute their proposed operational work plan submitted as part of their application.
Key components of this monitoring will include, but are not limited to:
• Meeting proposed milestones and deliverables;
• Producing timely and accurate reports with clear progress on quality and cost performance as described above; and
• Building and/or enhancing required infrastructure.
Award recipients will be required to report their actual performance on cost and quality outcomes and operational performance, and CMS will regularly monitor the results.
Awardees will be required to provide, or cooperate in providing, as applicable, the necessary data elements to CMS.
In addition to this self-monitoring and self-evaluation, CMS will also collect from awardees a standard minimum set of performance indicators through CMS monitoring and evaluation contractors.
CMS will contract with independent entities to assist in monitoring the models and to conduct an independent evaluation.
For specific details on monitoring, reporting, and evaluation requirements for Round Two of the HCIA, see the Funding Opportunity Announcement at https://www.grantsolutions.gov/gs/preaward/previewPublicAnnouncement.do?id=17996.
No cash reports are required.
CMS plans to collect data elements to be part of monitoring for all of the different models, and these monitoring and surveillance elements will feed into the evaluation.
All awardees will be required to cooperate in providing the necessary data elements to CMS or a CMS contractor.
Data for monitoring will include process, safety, and performance measures.
It will include, but will not be limited to, data on the background characteristics of the target population and target area, data characterizing the activities of the model, and a battery of follow-up data describing relevant characteristics of the target population or target area and metrics at selected intervals after commencement of the model.
This will include detailed information on model participant (i.e., beneficiaries participating in the model) characteristics and outcomes reported in a standard format.
Data for monitoring will be collected from awardees and/or CMS claims data sources.
The monitoring aspect of this initiative will balance the examination of the extent to which awardees demonstrate fidelity to their proposed models of care and the potential need to make mid-course corrections that improve the models of care based on feedback from the monitoring and evaluation findings.
Moreover, the evaluation will assess whether there are unintended consequences as a result of the model.
Each proposed model in this portfolio is expected to submit a Financial Plan and supplemental narrative and schedules that provide an explanation of how it expects to meaningfully reduce medical cost trend for their identified population.
The Financial Plan requires awardees to provide the following:
• Uses of Funds: Awardees should enter proposed use of funds in the Financial Plan template.
These funds must match Form SF 424A.
Applicants should provide yearly line-item projections on how awarded funds will be allocated.
The total use of funds will sum to the requested award.
• Savings:
o Data under Current Census should describe services currently provided to program participants.
Applicants are requested to provide data on the number of participants in applicant programs, the current baseline Per Beneficiary Per Year ("PBPY") Total Cost of Care for Participants touched by programs, and the proposed percent cost reduction the award funding will facilitate in those costs.
o Data under Proposed Expansion should describe the impact on the proposed expansion population that award funding will facilitate.
Applicants are requested to provide data on the number of participants targeted, the baseline PBPY Total Cost of Care for participants in targeted expansion area, and the proposed percent cost reduction the award funding will facilitate.
Applicants are required to provide supplemental narrative and supporting schedules with detailed information on the specific intervention expected to reduce cost and the estimated reduction in expenditures by funding source resulting from said intervention by service type and by funding source, including estimates for the number of affected individuals.
Applicants should provide backup documentation, e.g., research studies, evidence of reduced cost from existing intervention, et cetera, as available.
Applicants are encouraged to provide clear, detailed reports to facilitate objective, data-driven reviews.
CMS plans to collect data elements to be part of monitoring for all of the different models, and these monitoring and surveillance elements will feed into the evaluation.
All awardees will be required to cooperate in providing the necessary data elements to CMS or a CMS contractor.
Data for monitoring will include process, safety and performance measures.
It will include, but will not be limited to, data on the background characteristics of the target population and target area, data characterizing the activities of the program, and a battery of follow-up data describing relevant characteristics of the target population or target area and metrics at selected intervals after commencement of the program model.
Data for monitoring will be collected both from awardees and or CMS claims data sources.
The program monitoring aspect of this initiative will balance the examination of the extent to which awardees demonstrate fidelity to their proposed models of care and the potential need to make mid-course corrections that improve the models of care based on feedback from the monitoring and evaluation findings.
Moreover, the evaluation will assess whether there is evidence of harm or unintended consequences as a result of the intervention.
Audits
In accordance with the provisions of OMB Circular No. A-133 (Revised, June 27, 2003), "Audits of States, Local Governments, and Non-Profit Organizations," nonfederal entities that expend financial assistance of $500,000 or more in Federal awards will have a single or a program-specific audit conducted for that year. Nonfederal entities that expend less than $500,000 a year in Federal awards are exempt from Federal audit requirements for that year, except as noted in Circular No. A-133.
Records
See "Reports (111)" above.
Financial Information
Account Identification
75-0522-0-1-551.
Obigations
(Salaries) FY 12 $280,100,000; FY 13 est $308,300,000; and FY 14 est $506,500,000 - This total includes both Round One and Round Two awards. For Round One, estimated obligations by fiscal year for the program are as follows:
• FY2012 - $280.1
• FY2013 - $308.3
• FY2014 - $306.5
For more details, see the Funding Opportunity Announcement at https://www.grantsolutions.gov/gs/preaward/previewPublicAnnouncement.do?id=17996.
Range and Average of Financial Assistance
In Round Two of the Health Care Innovation Awards, the Innovation Center expects to make up to $900 million in funding available to support a diverse portfolio of new and innovative payment and service delivery models that will reduce the cost of health care and improve its quality in Medicare, Medicaid, and/or CHIP. CMS intends to fund the best qualified applications within the scope of available funds. CMS estimates that there will be approximately 100 awards, with a range of approximately $1 million to $30 million per award; however CMS is not obligated to fund a minimum number of applicants, or to distribute a minimum amount of funds available for the second round of Health Care Innovation Awards.
Cooperative agreements will be awarded with consideration to the criteria listed above under Award Procedure (093). Awardees might not receive the award amount requested and might be asked to adjust the service delivery model, payment model, work plan, budget, or other application deliverable. For specific details, see the Funding Opportunity Announcement at https://www.grantsolutions.gov/gs/preaward/previewPublicAnnouncement.do?id=17996.
In Round One, the Innovation Center made 107 awards ranging from approximately $1 million to $26.5 million for a three-year period. Cooperative agreements were awarded with consideration to: (1) available funding; (2) geographic diversity; and (3) the quality of each application and the ability to meet the goals of the project. In the first round, less than 5% percent of applications were funded. Profiles of Awardees are available on the CMS website at http://innovation.cms.gov/.
Regulations, Guidelines, and Literature
Not Applicable.
Information Contacts
Regional or Local Office
None. All programmatic questions about the Health Care Innovation Awards Round Two must be directed to the initiative email address: InnovationAwards@cms.hhs.gov. Responses to Frequently Asked Questions will be posted on http://innovation.cms.gov.
Headquarters Office
Sheila Hanley 7500 Security Blvd., Baltimore, Maryland 21207 Email: InnovationAwards@cms.hhs.gov Phone: 410-786-7724
Criteria for Selecting Proposals
See Award Procedures (093) Above.
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