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Military版 - Forbes: USMedicare stopped paying diagnostic tests.
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意大利总理说别的国家确诊少是因为他们根本不查Quest做了大量测试 但一半在等待结果
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话题: medicare话题: tests话题: codes话题: new话题: diagnostic
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The Obama Administration has stopped paying the bills from hundreds of
health care companies, and it has nothing to do with sequestration.
This is a story of bureaucratic mismanagement at the Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services, and the harm it’s visiting on the diagnostic testing
industry.
At issue is the way that Medicare reimburses everyone from the big
laboratory companies such as the Laboratory Corp of America (LH:NYSE) and
Quest Diagnostics Inc. (DGX:NYSE), to the molecular diagnostic labs inside
academic hospitals, and especially smaller firms that make proprietary tests
used by doctors to more effectively target treatments to patients with
conditions like cancer.
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Some of these proprietary tests — focused around the more accurate
diagnosis of prostate cancer — are profiled in today’s edition of the New
York Times. The incompetent manner in which Medicare has handled a change in
the reimbursement of similar tests has the potential to stymie one of the
most important and potentially cost-saving technologies in the pipeline.
The molecular diagnostics in question are used to screen for everything from
genetic markers that predict disease to proteins that help diagnose
illnesses and guide peoples’ response to treatments. These tests are
transforming the treatment of cancer, among many other maladies.
The Medicare agency decided to change the way it reimburses these sorts of
diagnostic tests. But it’s been slow to decide on its new approach. So in
the absence of a policy, the Medicare program is simply not paying its bills.
Previously, these diagnostics were reimbursed through a method called “code
stacking.” Under this old approach, adding up the “cost” of each
discrete step needed to perform a particular test derived the price paid for
molecular tests.
This “cost plus” approach to setting payment rates was familiar to
government actuaries. But it had many problems. Not least of which, it didn
’t necessarily correlate payment rates with value – but merely the
complexity of the test.
Some labs grew more adept than others at exploiting the payment scheme. A
handful of crafty labs would create more complex tests, or “stack”
additional steps in their molecular panels in order to game higher
reimbursement.
The result was a lot of variability in what was paid for similar diagnostics
, depending on which lab ran the test, and how good it was at “stacking”
codes.
Moreover, private insurers that reflexively piggy backed on the Medicare
payment scheme complained that the bills they got only identified a series
of molecular testing steps. These bills didn’t pinpoint the actual test
that was being performed. So insurers often didn’t know what they were
paying for.
The private health plans could have fixed this on their own, by demanding
that labs provide more information. But many health plans, looked to
Medicare to fix the billing system. Under pressure, the agency said it would
develop a new scheme.
The prior payment system was far from optimal. But so is Medicare’s
approach to replacing it. Moreover, under the new payment schemes, even when
Medicare starts to pay its bills again, the rates for individual tests are
likely to come down. That was the overriding impetus for changing the scheme
in the first place – to save the government money. It’s another reason
why big lab companies that make a lot of their margin on the complex,
molecular tests could get pinched going forward.
To move away from the “code stacking” and to a system that paid
diagnostics based on what each product was testing for, in 2010 Medicare
asked the American Medical Association to come up with specific codes for
the most common (and important) molecular tests. There were 116 of these new
codes in the first tranche. These test-specific codes became effective in
2011. But Medicare chose to retain the existing “stacking codes” and not
convert to the molecular codes until 2012.
Why wait? The idea was to give Medicare time to set prices for each of these
new codes. Medicare was urged by the labs to cross walk some average price
being paid to existing tests to the new codes (perhaps a median or weighted
average of the stacks being used, which CMS would be able to measure).
But Medicare didn’t trust the current prices. It didn’t want to import any
relic of the flawed stacking system into the new codes.
But instead of coming up with a new system, CMS took the full year to do
largely nothing. The agency sat on its hands. Then, only after winding down
the clock, the agency announced that it would let the local Medicare
carriers figure out what prices to assign to each of the different
diagnostic codes (through a byzantine process called “gap filling”). In
other words, Medicare punted.
It basically means that the local carriers, which contract with CMS to
administer the Medicare program for different regions of the country, now
have wide discretion to come up with their own prices. The entire punt gave
the local Medicare contractors no time – and no clear direction – on how
to assign prices to the different diagnostic codes. The result is that no
prices have been established for the vast majority of the marketplace. And
so many tests simply aren’t being paid for.
This is having a profound impact on the market for developing new tests.
Investors are shunning new investments as this gets sorted out. It says
nothing about how these rates are ultimately going to be established, and
whether the prices that the government assigns will reflect the value and
innovation that these products offer.
There has also been little transparency around how the local Medicare
carriers are coming up with their price schedules. There’s no right of
appeal from affected companies. And no clear methodology on how this all
gets done.
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相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: medicare话题: tests话题: codes话题: new话题: diagnostic