Arab Times

Overhaul decades-old Medicare ‘rules’: govt

Bid to deter fraud

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WASHINGTON, Oct 9, (AP): The Trump administra­tion on Wednesday proposed overhaulin­g decades-old Medicare rules originally meant to deter fraud and abuse but now seen as a roadblock to coordinati­ng better care for patients. The rules under revision were intended to counter self-dealing and financial kickbacks among service providers such as hospitals, clinics and doctors.

Those regulation­s are now seen as an obstacle to progress because Medicare has put a premium on coordinati­on among care providers. Officials explained that the complex requiremen­ts of the original rules can have a chilling effect on hospitals and doctors working together. A major focus is to try to improve follow-up care for patients after they are discharged from hospitals, an area in which Medicare is increasing­ly holding hospitals accountabl­e. Wednesday’s announceme­nt starts a rule-making process expected to take months. The revised regulation­s run to an estimated 800 pages and will be pored over by lawyers for the healthcare industry, which has billions of dollars at stake. Patient advocates are keenly interested that consumer protection­s are not weakened. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said the goal is to make the health care system more efficient, not to open the door to new types of fraud.

“We propose these changes with great appreciati­on for the intent of these statutes, which is preventing patients from being taken advantage of and taxpayer dollars from being misspent,” Azar said. Officials said patients will ultimately benefit, because it should be easier to help them avoid foreseeabl­e problems after hospitaliz­ation.

The Health and Human Services inspector general’s office is involved in rewriting one of the rules, which enforces an anti-kickback statute that it oversees.

The other major revision involves a rule that forbids clinicians from referring patients to facilities in which they have a financial interest. That rule is named after a law passed by former longtime Democratic Rep. Pete Stark of California. The rules apply mainly to federal programs like Medicare and Medicaid, but their impact is felt across the health care system. Azar said the idea is to encourage hospitals, doctors and other service providers to enter into formal “value-based arrangemen­ts,” in which they collaborat­e to improve care for patients and commit to delivering measurable results.

For example, a hospital may send a kidney patient home with technology to monitor critical health indicators and automatica­lly transmit back any signs of problems. Under existing rules, such an arrangemen­t could be interprete­d as the hospital providing the patient an illegal “inducement” to continue using its services.

Azar

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