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Aug
9

Medicare cuts physician reimbursement – Not!

CMS is going to change the way it pays physicians. Really. Well, CMS Director McClellan says they will, and soon. Policy types will recall that every year, physician reimbursement for procedures under Medicare is slated to drop by between 3% – 5%, depending on total expenditures the prior year and a really complicated formula (that is never followed). So each year, physicians scream, and every year, politicians say “no, just kidding”, and tweak the reimbursement to send a few more dollars to the docs. And I do mean “few”.
This year expect the same to happen; it is an election year, there are lots of powerful (read “lots of money”) forces in play here, and few elected officials want to take the political hit for cutting Medicare. So far, 80 senators have signed a letter asking that reimbursement levels be increased, not reduced.
Despite the political realities, McClellan is of the opinion that our elected officials will come up with a pay-for-performance scheme for CMS. Whether it ever gets through Congress is another story altogether.
For further edification, I’ll pass on the perspective of Bob Laszewski, long-time national health care policy expert and good friend. Bob’s view is that the increase in utilization driven by physician practice patterns is leading to the huge cost increases we are seeing in Medicare, and the stats back him up. Medicare’s per-service reimbursement in 2006 is essentially unchanged from five years ago, while utilization has gone up dramatically. So, price controls have not worked to hold down medical inflation.
Thus the interest in pay for performance for physicians. While it sounds interesting, it’s really hard to do.
As tough as it’s going to be, I see no better alternative.


One thought on “Medicare cuts physician reimbursement – Not!”

  1. I am not sure what world you live in. Out here in the provider world CMS not only has threatened but followed through on decreased reimbursement. In addition they are dis-allowing procedures that have historically been allowed and that have proven effective. Let’s talk about the real issues: Hospitals through-out this country are mis-managed, specialists have conflicts of interest all over the place, the on-going arms (technology) war among community hospitals and finally end stage of life pull out all of the stops medicine.

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Joe Paduda is the principal of Health Strategy Associates

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