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Sabtu, 23 April 2016

Medicare is changing the way it pays surgeons

Starting in 2017, Medicare will end global payments for operations. The current payment scheme combines preoperative, operative, and postoperative care into one fee. When the change occurs, each of those events will have to be billed separately—otherwise known as “unbundling.”

I missed this news when it first appeared late last year and thank one of my blog followers who calls himself Artiger for bringing it to my attention. An Advisory Board piece summarized the situation.

After analyzing a number of claims, Medicare came to the conclusion that it was paying for duplicate services. What a revelation! I could have told them that without a claims analysis.

For many years, certain surgical specialists have been delegating preoperative evaluations for “medical clearance” and postoperative management of everything but the incision to internists and hospitalists. Since the global fee was meant to include pre-and postop care, Medicare was indeed paying twice for the same service.

Representatives of the American College of Surgeons expressed concern that sicker patients would need more in-hospital postoperative visits thereby incurring more bills. [If they receive more care, maybe they should pay more.] They also worried that since postoperative care was covered under the global fee, patients might forgo office visits after surgery because of increased costs.

The unbundling of the global fee may have other unintended consequences. Since preoperative and postoperative care reimbursement will be separated from the fee for the operation itself, surgeons will be paid less for performing surgery.

Most surgeons would rather operate than make rounds and may look to perform more surgery to make up for the loss of income. This could end up costing Medicare more money.

With global payments, there is no incentive for a surgeon to keep a patient in the hospital longer than absolutely necessary. When the payment method changes, the exact opposite will exist. And surgeons who aren’t very busy might schedule more postoperative office visits to make up the difference caused by the reduction in the surgical fee.

This might all become moot anyway because Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Matthews Burwell has proposed that 30% of Medicare payments be converted to a non-fee-for-service model by the end of next year rising to 50% by the end of 2018.

According to a news@JAMA article, doctors may be given incentives to join Accountable Care Organizations. Quality indicators such as readmissions and infections currently applied to hospital fees might be imposed on doctors too. More bundled payments for acute care illnesses may be created. [This of course is the exact opposite of the plan to unbundle global surgery fees. Im getting confused].

One thing Im sure of is that none of this is making me regret that I retired.

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