Welcome to the Podiatry Arena forums, for communication between foot health professionals about podiatry and related topics.
You are currently viewing our podiatry forum as a guest which gives you limited access to view all podiatry discussions and access our other features. By joining our free global community of Podiatrists and other interested foot health care professionals you will have access to post podiatry topics (answer and ask questions), communicate privately with other members (PM), upload content, view attachments, receive a weekly email update of new discussions, earn CPD points and access many other special features. Registered users do not get displayed the advertisments in posted messages. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our global Podiatry community today!
If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.
Medical News Today are reporting: Medicare Will Not Pay For Preventable Conditions Acquired At Hospitals
Quote:
Medicare no longer will reimburse hospitals for the treatment of preventable errors, injuries and infections that occur in the facilities under a new rule scheduled for publication this week, a move that CMS officials said could save lives and millions of dollars, the New York Times reports. Under the rule, Medicare no longer will reimburse hospitals for the treatment of certain "conditions that could reasonably have been prevented," and the facilities "cannot bill the beneficiary for any charges associated with the hospital-acquired complication" (Pear, New York Times, 8/19).
The eight conditions for which Medicare no longer will reimburse hospitals for treatment include: falls; mediastinitis, an infection that can develop after heart surgery; urinary tract infections that result from improper use of catheters; pressure ulcers; and vascular infections that result from improper use of catheters. In addition, the conditions include three "never events": objects left in the body during surgery, air embolisms and blood incompatibility (USA Today, 8/20).
The rule, proposed by CMS in April and mandated by a 2005 law, will take effect in October 2008. CMS officials said that next year they plan to add three additional conditions to the list (Zhang, Wall Street Journal, 8/20).
Comments
CMS spokesperson Jeff Nelligan said, "Our efforts in this arena and in other payment rules are to ensure that CMS is an active purchaser, not passive payer, of health care." Nelligan added that the new rule "underscores our drive toward quality, efficiency and integrity in the hospital setting." Herb Kuhn, acting CMS deputy commissioner, said, "Medicare payments for inpatient services will be more accurate and better reflect the severity of the patient's condition" (AP/Houston Chronicle, 8/18).
Lisa McGiffert, a health care policy analyst at Consumers Union, said, "Hundreds of thousands of people suffer needlessly from preventable hospital infections and medical errors every year." McGiffert added, "Medicare is using its clout to improve care and keep patients safe. It's forcing hospitals to face this problem in a way they never have before."
Kenneth Kizer, a patient safety expert and former undersecretary for health at the Department of Veterans Affairs, said that the rules "should be part of a larger initiative to require the reporting of health care events that everyone agrees should never happen," adding, "Any such effort must include a mechanism to make sure hospitals comply."
Implications for Hospitals
The new rule "raises the possibility of changes in medical practice as doctors hew more closely to clinical guidelines and hospitals perform more tests to assess the condition of patients at the time of admission," according to the Times. Most states do not require hospital records to indicate whether patients develop conditions before or after admission, according to Nancy Foster, a vice president of the American Hospital Association. According to Foster, the rule will require hospitals to conduct additional tests to prove that Medicare beneficiaries developed conditions before admission to ensure reimbursement.
Hospital officials "worry that they will have to absorb the costs of these extra tests because Medicare generally pays a flat fee for each case," the Times reports. In addition, Foster said that some of the conditions on the list of those for which no longer will reimburse hospitals for treatment are not preventable in all cases. Tammy Lundstrom, chief medical officer at Providence Hospital in Michigan, said, "Serious, costly infections can occur even when doctors and nurses take all the recommended precautions."
The rule also might prompt private health insurers to implement similar policies. Susan Pisano, spokesperson for America's Health Insurance Plans, said, "Private insurers will take a close look at what Medicare is doing, with an eye to adopting similar policies" (New York Times, 8/19).
Re: Medicare Will Not Pay For Preventable Conditions Acquired At Hospitals
For years now, acute care facilities have not had to subscribe to the same stringent codes that long term care facilities have. Many times, a patient is discharged from a hospital to a SNF or LTAC with multiple decubitus ulcerations. It appears to me that if a person develops these complications in the acute care setting that Medicare will no longer pay the HOSPITAL for the longer stay based upon the DRG system.
My only hope is that it won't filter down to Part B where the physician who is going to treat this complication is no longer reimbursed as well. I'm sorry Dr. Pod but I think this is a double edged sword. The acute care hospitals will have to take measures to prevent these issues, but as I said, if this were to filter down to the treating physicians such as us.....
While I think evidence based medicine has its merits, will those who provide quality care in a timely and cost effective manner be reimbursed at a higher rate than those who do not? Highly unlikely
Re: Medicare Will Not Pay For Preventable Conditions Acquired At Hospitals
Hmmmmm.
"Medicare no longer will reimburse hospitals for the treatment of preventable errors, injuries and infections that occur in the facilities........."
I have a few problems with this. First, Medicare, a Government Agency, delegates the insurance to private for profit companies. These companies will decide what is PREVENTABLE and what was not. Wonder what side of the issue THEY will err on!
Second: Infections? Nocosomal infections will ALWAYS be with us. Post op infections will ALWAY be with us. So now the hospitals have deal with the COST of treating nocosomal infections (and still remain profitable or at least OPEN) - This is not right.
As far as getting reimbursed for treating complications... treating any complication is not an easy task and certainly should be fully reimbursed.
If you feel, as I do, that the vast majority of providers are honest, hard working, well trained, ethical practitioners, then NONE of this should make you happy. If, however, you feel some of us take advantage of the situation for monetary gains or the hospitals are not run properly or the care is somehow substandard, then yes, I guess this information will make you happy.
The press is always complaining of the price of health care, but now additional testings are being applauded by those very people who feel the system is already over utilized and expensive!
The three hospitals I work at take complications very seriously, as do the providers within the hospital. To have a Government agency run by the very sector (private insurance) that is glutting the system be put in a position to squeeze the providers even more is unbelievable to me.
Steve
__________________
DrSArbes
Fellow American College of Foot & Ankle Surgeons
Board Certified Foot & Ankle Surgery, ABPS
Green Bay, Wisconsin, USA