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Senior Citizen Politics
Docs Get Temporary Relief from Medicare Pay Cut Due
Tomorrow
Washington Post says freeze by Health & Human
Services could last 10 days
June
30, 2008 -
HHS Secretary Mike
Leavitt on Friday said that the agency will maintain the current
Medicare payment rate for physicians because Congress was unable to pass
legislation to avert a 10.6% cut scheduled to go into effect on Tuesday
before lawmakers left for the Fourth of July recess, the
Washington
Post reports. According to the
Post, congressional aides
said the freeze to payment rates could last 10 days (Kane,
Washington Post, 6/28).
|
10-day
extension would give senators three days after they return on
July 7 from their recess to approve legislation |
A House-passed bill (HR
6331) that would block the reduction to physician fees failed
by one vote to receive the 60 votes in the Senate required to gain
cloture on Thursday.
The House had
passed the measure by a
veto-proof margin earlier last week. The bill is similar to a measure (S
3101) proposed by
Senate Finance Committee
Chair Max Baucus (D-Mont.) that also
failed to receive enough
votes to invoke cloture (Kaiser
Daily Health Policy Report
[1], 6/27).
Leavitt said he intends to "minimize the impact" of
the fee reduction, the
New York
Times reports. According to the
Times,
CMS officials said
Medicare would hold all new claims for 10 days. As a result, physicians
would not experience reduced fees "until July 15, at the earliest,"
Leavitt said (Pear, New York
Times, 6/28).
According to congressional aides, a 10-day
extension would give senators three days after they return on July 7
from their recess to approve legislation to curb the fee reduction,
according to congressional aides.
The White House said that President Bush would have
vetoed the House measure and that the Finance Committee was close to
working out a compromise that would halt the fee reduction without
making cuts to Medicare Advantage, which Bush opposes.
The House bill would have cut $14 billion in
payments to private health insurers under MA over five years. Leavitt
said that if lawmakers are unable to pass legislation blocking the fee
cut by the end of the extension, he hopes to pay physicians
retroactively after the issue is resolved (Washington
Post, 6/28).
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) on
Friday in a statement said that Democrats will reintroduce the House
bill when lawmakers return from the recess (Marcus,
Bloomberg/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 6/28).
Democrats Blame Republicans for Failure To
Prevent Fee Cut
Democrats on Friday "moved swiftly" to "assail"
Senate Republicans for voting against the House measure, the
Times reports. According
to the Times,
Democrats compiled data on each senator's votes on previous Medicare
bills and the amount of their campaign contributions from the health
insurance industry.
The
Democratic Senatorial Campaign
Committee in news releases targeted, particularly, Republican
senators who are up for re-election and voted against the measure,
including Sens. John Sununu (N.H.), Lamar Alexander (Tenn.), John
Barrasso (Wyo.), Saxby Chambliss (Ga.), John Cornyn (Texas), James
Inhofe (Okla.), Mitch McConnell (Ky.) and Roger Wicker (Miss.).
However, Rebecca Fisher, a spokesperson for the
National Republican Senatorial
Committee, said, "Democrats are trying to mislead voters into
thinking it was the Republicans' fault the bill didn't pass." She said
it was a lack of bipartisanship that caused the bill to fail. According
to the New York Times, the House-passed bill was voted for by
Republicans by more than two to one (New
York Times, 6/28).
Physician Reaction
Even without the reduction to physician fees, some
physicians are debating whether to close their practices, retire early
or stop treating Medicare beneficiaries, the
Baltimore
Sun reports.
According to the Sun, doctors in Maryland are also faced with high
overhead costs and lower payments from private insurers than elsewhere
(Bishop, Baltimore Sun,
6/29).
The
Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette looks at how the "annual dance" over
Medicare physician fees affects the ability of doctors to manage their
practices. For years -- since the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 --
reductions in fees have been looming for physicians who treat Medicare
beneficiaries. However, every year they have been blocked by Congress.
One physician, Melinda Campopiano, said that the
prospect that the cuts will not be blocked makes it hard to budget for
purchases that would be paid for over many years, such as an electronic
health records system. In addition, because private insurers frequently
base their payments on Medicare rates, a cut could have a larger effect
on physicians, according to the
Post-Gazette (Twedt,
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette,
6/29).
"Many more physicians will reluctantly retire or
reduce clinical practice time," Jack Lewin, CEO of the
American College of Cardiology,
said, adding, "This hurts access to fragile senior populations" (Abrams,
AP/San
Francisco Chronicle, 6/30).
DME Competitive Bidding Program
A competitive bidding program for durable medical
equipment is scheduled to begin Tuesday because the Senate did not
approve the House bill, which contained a provision to delay the
program, the
Post-Gazette reports (Toland,
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette,
6/29). Under the program, CMS will select DME suppliers to participate
in Medicare based on bids they submit. The 2003 Medicare law mandated
the program as part of a larger effort to implement competitive bidding.
In 2008, the program will operate in 10 of the largest Metropolitan
Statistical Areas and will apply to 10 of the top DME, prosthetics,
orthotics and supplies product categories. In 2009, the program will
expand to an additional 70 MSAs and will continue to expand in future
years. The program also will apply to additional product categories in
future years. The program likely will result in an average 26% decrease
in the prices of medical equipment in the 10 MSAs, according to CMS (Kaiser
Daily Health Policy Report
[2], 6/27).
Acting CMS Administrator Kerry Weems -- speaking
Friday in Pittsburgh, one of the MSAs affected by the program, during a
discussion regarding the DME program -- said that about one-fourth of
suppliers who submitted bids were selected. However, suppliers that were
not picked can subcontract under suppliers that were. Also, some might
be "grandfathered" and allowed to continue providing services to
existing clients (Toland,
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 6/29).
Broadcast Coverage
●●●
NPR's "All
Things Considered" on Friday reported on the Medicare
physician fee cut. The segment includes comments from Baucus, Reid,
McConnell, Finance Committee ranking member Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and
American Medical Association
President Nancy Nielsen (Rovner, "All Things Considered," NPR, 6/27).
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