Medicare Payment Bill Falters in Senate as July 1 Deadline Looms
By James Arvantes
6/17/2008
"The AAFP is deeply disappointed that the Senate has failed to take up debate on the Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008 (S. 3101)," said AAFP President Jim King, M.D., of Selmer, Tenn., in a prepared statement. "This procedural breakdown is a serious blow to the efforts on the part of the physician community to reach a consensus before the disastrous 10.6 percent Medicare physician pay cut, now scheduled to take effect July 1."
King said the impending cut will create confusion among Medicare patients as they try to determine the amount of their co-payments. In addition, it will force family physicians to cope with dramatically lower revenues at a time of skyrocketing business costs.
An Alternative
In a June 16 letter to Grassley, however, AAFP Board Chair, Rick Kellerman, M.D., of Wichita, Kan., said that although the Academy appreciates Grassley's sponsorship of S. 3118 and the 18-month payment patch, the Academy does have some concerns about the bill.
In particular, Kellerman pointed out that the bill does not contain "any provision that would prohibit or restrict the practice known as 'deeming' by Medicare Advantage private fee-for-service plans. Requiring practicing physicians to accept, without any primary opportunity to review, all payment terms and other obligations to a health plan by simply seeing a patient once is unfair and inconsistent with sound business principles," said Kellerman.
In addition, he said, Grassley's measure would direct the secretary of HHS to design and implement a budget-neutral system that would base a portion of physician payments on the quality of their performance. "Because of the budget-neutral requirement, such a system would make it necessary for HHS to withhold a portion of the payment for some physicians who provide appropriate medical care," said Kellerman.
Kellerman also expressed concerns about "the absence of a provision that would increase the (payment) cap for both federally qualified health centers and rural health clinics." Kellerman noted that although the AAFP is willing to support S. 3118, he also would like to discuss the Academy's concerns with the Senator.
Finding the Compromise
Grassley's proposal would lower the cost of the payment update by leaving out provisions to assist lower-income Medicare patients. Grassley and Baucus are expected to work out a compromise based on their two proposals, but it is not clear whether they can reach a compromise before the July 1 deadline or whether Congress will have enough time to pass a measure before then.
"We urge both Republicans and Democrats to immediately negotiate compromise legislation that meets the needs of both patients and the physicians who care for them," said King in the written statement. "Only by acting quickly can Congress and the administration ensure the stability of a health care program on which millions of elderly and disabled patients depend."
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