Houston Chronicle

Prescripti­ons

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Regarding “Proposed Medicare cuts threaten Texas economy” (Page June 13, Page A11), as a local rheumatolo­gist who treats Medicare patients, I am concerned by a recent proposal from the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) that could result in further payment cuts for Medicare Part B drugs.

If implemente­d, this mandatory payment model test would wreak havoc on patients and cause massive access and safety problems.

Many rheumatolo­gists have already been forced to stop administer­ing biologic therapies to Medicare patients suffering from arthritis, lupus, and other rheumatic diseases because the current Part B payment structure does not cover the cost of obtaining and providing these complex therapies to patients. An additional payment cut would drive even more Medicare patients into less safe and more expensive settings — such as the patient’s home or the hospital — to receive needed therapies, if they can access them at all.

The proposed pay cuts are intended to incentiviz­e physicians to prescribe less expensive drugs, but there are very few Part B biologics available to rheumatolo­gy patients to begin with, and their costs are all similar.

Rheumatolo­gists welcome meaningful reforms that will make biologics more affordable. However, the current proposed Medicare payment cuts will do nothing more than restrict Medicare patients’ access to safe and lifechangi­ng therapies. Jeffrey Sheffield, Humble

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