Title: Medicare 101
1Medicare 101
- Rebecca Kelly
- ACC Legislative Conference
- September 15, 2008
2Session Topics
- Outlook for Medicare physician payment for
cardiology in 2009 - Major Medicare regulatory issues for 2009
- Provisions of MIPPA affecting payment
- PQRI for 2009
- Key CMS regulatory proposals
- Whats next
3Medicare the big picture
- 428 billion spent in 2007
- 43 million beneficiaries
- 22 of total personal health expenditures
4Where does the Medicare dollar go?
5Medicare Spending as Percent of GDP
6Medicare Part A
- Inpatient hospital care, nursing home care,
inpatient rehabilitation, home care, hospice - Paid for by a dedicated payroll tax
- No premium for most beneficiaries
7Medicare Part B
- Physician services, outpatient hospital, DME,
some drugs, physical therapy - Paid for by general revenue and beneficiary
premiums - Premiums are set to cover 25 of projected cost
8Part C
- Medicare managed care plans (Medicare Advantage)
- Paid for by Part A and B funding streams
9Medicare Part D
- Prescription drug coverage
- Paid for by general revenue and beneficiary
premiums
10Medicare administration
- Private companies local Medicare carriers and
fiscal intermediaries actually run Medicare on a
day-to-day basis - Medicare is moving from a system of state-based
carriers and FIs to a system of regional MACs
that will administer both Part A and Part B
11Medicare and physicians
- More than 569,000 physicians
- 68 billion in expenses under MPFS
- Cardiology accounts for almost 10 percent
12Medicare physician payment basics
- Payments are based on RVUs for each code
- The pool of RVUs is fixed any changes must be
budget neutral - The Medicare conversion factor determines the
overall level of Medicare payments - A formula spelled out in the Medicare statute
determines the annual update to the conversion
factor
13Environment for Medicare physician payment
- Payments have declined in real terms
- Total expenditures on physician services continue
to rise - Services per beneficiary grew 35 between 2000
2006
14Outlook for 2009
- MIPPA prevented the 15 cut
- 1.1 positive update for 2009
- Butpayment cuts for some cardiology services are
certain
15Sources of cuts for cardiology
- Practice expense transition
- Bundled services
- DRA
- Budget neutrality
16Practice expense transition
- 2009 is the 3rd year of transition to new
practice expense RVUs - Projected impact on cardiology 1 percent cut in
total Medicare payments - Impact varies for different services
17Cardiology practice expense impact
18Bundled services
- Assumptions
- Fee for service is inflationary
- Paying for small units of service makes it worse
- Component codes and add-on codes lead to
duplicative payment - The solution? Bundled codes!
- Cardiology is the test case
19Bundled cardiology services in 2009
- New comprehensive code for transthoracic
echocardiography - New combination code for stress echocardiography
- 2010 and 2011 we move beyond echo to other
areas of cardiology
20DRA 2009
21Budget neutrality
- Many changes to RVUs in 2007 and 2008 from 5 Year
Review of the RBRVS - Budget neutrality adjustment --12 reduction to
work RVUs - Per MIPPA -- 2009 and forward, this adjustment is
applied to the conversion factor - CMS has not yet announced what the adjustment
will be
22Budget neutrality impact for cardiology, 2008
23PQRI 2009
- Bigger bonus payment 2 percent
- More measures 179 proposed
- More options for reporting
- Registries
- EHR
- Measures groups, including CAD
-
24CMS proposals for 2009 -- IDTF
- All physician practices performing diagnostic
tests would enroll in Medicare as IDTFs, comply
with IDTF requirements - ACC and cardiology community strongly opposed
this proposal - Well continue to work to educate CMS about
better ways to promote quality for diagnostic
testing - Watch for Final Rule for physician fee schedule
for outcome
25CMS Proposals Anti-markup
- Last year, physician community successfully
delayed implementation of sweeping expansion of
prohibition on mark-up of purchased diagnostic
tests - CMS proposed options for revising the rule
scheduled to launch January 1, 2009 - Cardiology community still opposed --- revisions
would still unreasonably restrict arrangements
that benefit patients
26Cardiac device monitoring codes
- ACC and HRS developed a series of 23 new CPT
codes for cardiac device monitoring - New codes will be effective January 1
- ACC and HRS will be providing a variety of
resources to help members learn about the new
codes
27Whats next?
28How does CMS determine the update?
- A formula spelled out in the Medicare statute
determines the annual change - Known as the Sustainable Growth Rate or SGR
system - There are three components
- Sustainable growth rate (SGR)
- Medicare Economic Index (MEI)
- Annual update adjustment factor (UAF)
29SGR
- Put in place to control growth in spending on
physician services - Links changes in spending to factors affecting
the cost of providing services to Medicare
beneficiaries and to economic growth - SGR used to set an annual target for spending on
physician services
30SGR formula
- SGR is the product of four factors
- Change in physician fees
- Change in Medicare fee for service enrollment
- Change in real per capita GDP
- Change in law and regulation affecting spending
on physician services - CMS estimates SGR for 2009 at 0.7
-
31Calculating the annual fee schedule update
- Annual update to the conversion factor is the
product of - Medicare Economic Index (MEI)
- Update Adjustment Factor
- Must also account for the cost of previous
temporary fixes that havent been paid for
32Update Adjustment Factor Formula
- .75 Target08 Actual06
- Actual08
-
- .33 Target96 08 Actual96 08
- Actual spending08 SGR09
-
33Flaws with UAF
- Setting of target SGR and all its flaws
- Calculation of actual expenditures
- Cumulative aspect of formula
34ACC Position
- SGR system is fatally flawed
- Cannot account for technological advances and
expansion of medical knowledge - Inappropriately linked to GDP
- Cumulative nature of system means the problem can
only get worse - Align financial incentives for patient-centered,
evidence-based, cost-effective care - Link updates to the cost of providing care
35What to expect in the meantime
- Scrutiny of high volume, high growth services
- Bundling of payments
- Focus on overvalued services
- Aligning payments across service sites
36Bundling of payments
- Micro level
- move away from add-on codes, component coding for
physician services - Macro level
- Episode of treatment payments
- Bundling of payments across providers
37Overvalued Services
- MedPAC pressure on CMS and RUC to decrease RVUs
- Belief that high volume, high growth services are
overpriced - Cardiology must expect close scrutiny of its
procedures
38Challenges for Cardiology
- Can we maintain work and practice expense value
for CV services? - Can we make the case for coverage and payment of
patient care services that are not paid for now? - Can cardiology lead the way to a better system?
39ACC Regulatory Staff
- Rebecca Kelly 202-375-6398
- rkelly_at_acc.org
- Brian Whitman 202-375-6396
- bwhitman_at_acc.org
- Gretchen Wyatt 202-375-6392
- gwyatt_at_acc.org
- Kendall Kodey 202-375-6216
- kkodey_at_acc.org