The Palm Beach Post

Proposal aims to overhaul Medicare

Doctors would be paid same amount per office visit, regardless of illness.

- Robert Pear

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion is proposing huge changes in the way Medicare pays doctors for the most common of all medical services, the office visit, offering physicians basically the same amount, regardless of a patient’s condition or the complexity of the services provided.

Administra­tion officials said the proposal would radically reduce paperwork burdens, freeing doctors to spend more time with patients. The government would pay one rate for new patients and another, lower rate for visits with establishe­d patients.

“Time spent on paperwork is time away from patients,” said Seema Verma, administra­tor of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. She estimated that the change would save 51 hours of clinic time per doctor per year.

But critics say the proposal would underpay doctors who care for patients with the greatest medical needs and the most complicate­d ailments — and could discourage some physicians from taking Medicare patients. They also say it would increase the risk of erroneous and fraudulent payments because doctors would submit less informatio­n to document the services provided.

Medicare would pay the same amount for evaluating a patient with sniffles and a head cold and a patient with complicate­d Stage 4 metastatic breast cancer, said Ted Okon, executive director of the Community Oncology Alliance, an advocacy group for cancer doctors and patients. He called that “simply crazy.”

Dr. Angus B. Worthing, a rheumatolo­gist, said he understood the administra­tion’s objective. “Doctors did not go to medical school to type on a computer all day,” he said.

But, he added: “This proposal is setting up a potential disaster. Doctors will be less likely to see Medicare patients and to go into our specialty. Patients with arthritis and osteoporos­is may have to wait longer to see the right specialist­s.”

Private insurers often follow Medicare’s lead, so the proposed change has implicatio­ns that go far beyond the Medicare program.

The proposal, part of Medicare’s physician fee schedule for 2019, is to be published Friday in the Federal Register, with an opportunit­y for public comment until Sept. 10. The new policies would apply to services provided to Medicare patients starting in January.

“We anticipate this to be a very, very significan­t and massive change, a welcome relief for providers across the nation,” Verma said, adding that it fulfills President Donald Trump’s promise to “cut the red tape of regulation.”

“Evaluation and management services” are the foundation of an office visit. Medicare now recognizes five levels of office visits, with Level 5 involving the most comprehens­ive medical history and physical examinatio­n of a patient, and the most complex decision-making by the doctor.

Level 1 is mostly for nonphysici­an services: for example, a five-minute visit with a nurse to check the blood pressure of a patient recently placed on a new medication.

A Level 5 visit could include a thorough hourlong evaluation of a patient with heart failure, chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease, high blood pressure and diabetes with blood sugar out of control.

“The difference­s between Levels 2 to 5 are often really difficult to discern and time-consuming to document,” said Dr. Kate Goodrich, Medicare’s chief medical officer.

Medicare payment rates for new patients now range from $76 for a Level 2 office visit to $211 for a Level 5 visit. The Trump administra­tion proposal would establish a single new rate of about $135. That could mean gains for doctors who specialize in routine care, but a huge hit for those who deal mainly with complicate­d patients, such as rheumatolo­gists and oncologist­s.

For establishe­d patients, the proposal calls for a payment rate of about $93, in place of current rates ranging from $45 to $148 for the four different levels of office visits.

“This proposal is likely to penalize physicians who treat sicker patients, even though they spend more time and effort and more resources managing those patients,” said Deborah J. Grider, who has audited tens of thousands of medical records and written a book on the subject.

Documentat­ion requiremen­ts have increased in response to growing concerns about health care fraud and improper payments that cost Medicare billions of dollars a year.

In many cases, federal auditors could not determine whether services were actually provided or were medically necessary. In some cases, they found that doctors

Private insurers often follow Medicare’s lead, so the proposed change has implicatio­ns that go far beyond the Medicare program.

had billed Medicare — and patients — for more costly services than they actually performed.

In a report required by federal law, officials estimated early this year that 18 percent of Medicare payments for office visits with new patients were incorrect or improper, about three times the error rate for establishe­d patients.

To prevent fraud and abuse, Medicare officials have repeatedly told doctors to document their claims. “If it is not documented, it has not been done” — that is the principle set forth in Medicare’s billing manual for doctors.

The Trump administra­tion is moving away from that policy.

“We have proposed to move to a system with minimal documentat­ion requiremen­ts for Levels 2 to 5 and one single payment rate,” Goodrich said.

Doctors now must provide more documentat­ion for higher levels of care. Under the proposal, “practition­ers would only need to meet documentat­ion requiremen­ts currently associated with a Level 2 visit.” That would reduce the need for audits to verify the level of office visits.

Medicare officials acknowledg­ed that doctors who typically bill at Levels 4 and 5 could see financial losses under the proposal. But they said some of the losses could potentiall­y be offset by “add-on payments” for primary care doctors and certain other medical specialist­s.

With such adjustment­s, Medicare officials said, the impact on most doctors would be relatively modest. A table included in the proposed rule indicates that obstetrici­ans and gynecologi­sts would gain the most, while dermatolog­ists, rheumatolo­gists and podiatrist­s would lose the most.

 ?? ERIN SCHAFF / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Dr. Angus Worthing sees a patient at his office in Chevy Chase, Md., on Friday. The Trump administra­tion hopes to cut red tape by establishi­ng a single Medicare rate for office visits.
ERIN SCHAFF / THE NEW YORK TIMES Dr. Angus Worthing sees a patient at his office in Chevy Chase, Md., on Friday. The Trump administra­tion hopes to cut red tape by establishi­ng a single Medicare rate for office visits.

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