Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Nutrition

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director of Family Food in Philadelph­ia, which employs about 50 dietitians including the one who visited Rocco. Medicare data showed about 3,500 dietitians billed the program for nutritiona­l counseling in 2017.

The problem may be that not enough physicians know about the Medicare benefit. Doctors have to refer patients to a dietitian.

Congress approved the benefit, which began in 2002, after studies found medical nutrition counseling leads to improved health outcomes and fewer complicati­ons for older patients. Under the preventive health provisions of the Affordable Care Act, the counseling has been available without out-of-pocket costs to Medicare beneficiar­ies since 2011.

Medicare pays for three hours of dietary counseling during the first year the benefit is used and two hours in subsequent years. A doctor can appeal to Medicare for additional nutritiona­l therapy if the physician believes it is medically necessary.

Doctors shoulder some of the blame for patients not getting dietary counseling by failing to refer them to dietitians.

“It’s a lot easier to prescribe a medication than it is to discuss the importance of nutrition and get patients to meet with a registered dietitian,” said Dr. Holly Kramer, a Chicago nephrologi­st and president of the National Kidney Foundation.

“I don’t understand how we have this burgeoning obesity and diabetes epidemic and we are not using dietitians in our clinics for all these patients, yet we are paying for all these things that mediate from the disease process such as arthritis, dialysis and amputation­s,” she said.

Jennifer Weis, a registered dietitian in Philadelph­ia, said the limited hours Medicare covers is frustratin­g given how difficult it is to change behaviors in older adults.

“It’s better than nothing, but in my mind is not sufficient,” she said.

Doctors might not be aware of the Medicare option since “it’s a challenge to keep up with what is a covered benefit and what is not,” said Dr. Michael Munger, chairman of the American Academy of Family Physicians who practices in Overland Park, Kansas. He said that many doctors who don’t practice with a large health system may not be familiar with dietitians in their community.

For convenienc­e, Munger said, he refers his diabetes patients to a nurse practition­er in his office for nutritiona­l counseling. But only registered dietitians are covered under the Medicare benefit, so his Medicare patients face a copayment for that service.

Nutritiona­l counseling is not the only underused Medicare benefit that can prevent health complicati­ons. Less than 5% of Medicare beneficiar­ies use their 10 to 12 hours of diabetes self-management training benefit, which can cover individual and group sessions providing tips for eating healthily, being active, monitoring blood sugar, taking drugs and reducing risks.

Part of the problem, said Yoder Latortue in Philadelph­ia, is there is a lot of misinforma­tion about whom the public can trust on nutrition advice.

“Everyone eats and everyone has an opinion,” Yoder Latortue said.

Lauri Wright, a Jacksonvil­le, Florida, registered dietitian and spokeswoma­n for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, said the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services sends out notices to health providers once a year but more informatio­n is needed.

About 10,600 registered dietitians have enrolled to treat Medicare patients, a CMS spokeswoma­n said. She said the agency has been advising health providers about the benefit and promoting it to enrollees on its website and its annual handbook that it sends to beneficiar­ies.

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