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Author Topic: CMS cuts dialysis funding (actually a good thing)  (Read 2886 times)
plugger
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« on: December 04, 2013, 05:22:14 PM »

As expected, and in response to a congressional directive from the American Taxpayer Relief Act, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Department of Health & Human Services (CMS) made a 3.3% cut in payments for dialysis facilities for 2014 to account for reduced drug utilization.  Rather than implementing the full 12% reduction as proposed by the agency this summer, CMS instead chose to phase in the cuts over time.  The 2014 reduction is 27% of the total amount to be cut over the next 3-4 years.

According to federal law, dialysis facilities are entitled to inflationary updates and other fee increases each year to account for, among other items, the increases in the costs for operating a facility and providing the services.  For 2014, CMS calculated this to be 2.8%  When combined with other existing components of the payment formula, the net result is a slight decrease in payments to facilities.  CMS also noted in the rule that it expected the 2015 cut to the drug component would be largely offset by these adjustments  again, resulting in another flat payment.  CMS intends to complete the full 12% cut by 2016 or 2017.

Therefore, the impact of the CMS rule is that rather than getting payment increases each year, dialysis centers will receive flat funding at least for the next two years; this is a reduction in Medicare spending.  Da Vita has already publicly expressed its concerns with the CMS rule and has pledged to fight these reductions in Congress and with the agency in the weeks and months ahead. Also, by increasing payments for home dialysis training, CMS likely provided longer term incentives to shift care to the home and away from these dialysis centers.

http://dialysisadvocates.com/news/

Download the entire Patient Rights Watch Ruling.

http://dialysisadvocates.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/CMS-ESRD-2014-Payment-Final-Rule.pdf
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« Reply #1 on: December 04, 2013, 05:23:46 PM »

I've heard these for-profits have been crying about who will do dialysis if they don't.  Let's see, how about: hospitals, nonprofits, and I would love to see these medical co-ops I've been reading about!  Or maybe the Italians:

"Italy has one of the lowest mortality rates for dialysis care -- about one in nine patients dies each year, compared with one in five here. Yet Italy spends about one-third less than we do per patient."
http://www.propublica.org/article/in-dialysis-life-saving-care-at-great-risk-and-cost 
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Proud member of DialysisEthics since 2000

DE responsible for:

*2000 US Senate hearings

*Verified statistics on "Dialysis Facility Compare"

*Doctors have to review charts before they can be reimbursed

*2000 and 2003 Office of Inspector General (OIG) reports on the conditions in dialysis

*2007 - Members of DialysisEthics worked for certification of hemodialysis
technicians in Colorado - bill passed, renewed in 2012 and 2019

*1999 to present - nonviolent dismissed patients returned to their
clinics or placed in other clinics or hospitals over the years

On my tombstone: He was a good kind of crazy

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« Reply #2 on: December 04, 2013, 05:24:57 PM »

Medicare payment cuts is a victory for Dialysis Patients

Wednesday, December 4, 2013 | By Scott | No Comments

This is a victory for dialysis patients. Medicare pays for healthcare and it appears to be squeezing the buffalo off the nickel. If Davita holds true to their statement of pulling away from the inner cities and rural areas. That should be a blessing, the patients will go back to their individual Nephrologist, where big non-profit companies don’t want to buy them, and dialysis patient healthcare can only improve.  Nephrologists will be accountable for the patient care and keep factual statistics, a Nephrologist will remain the doctor, not become a sales agent. Patients will not be without dialysis, Nephrologist cannot dump or blacklist his patients legally. Plus these Nephrologist will be accountable for their units, and not have big non-profits protecting them.
Arlene Mullin-Tinker
Dialysis Advocates LLC
 

View letters sent to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services/Department of Health & Human Services, House Ways & Means Committee, and the Senate Finance Committee.  Dialysis Advocates and other patient rights organization were a big part of influencing the ruling.

http://dialysisadvocates.com/news/
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Proud member of DialysisEthics since 2000

DE responsible for:

*2000 US Senate hearings

*Verified statistics on "Dialysis Facility Compare"

*Doctors have to review charts before they can be reimbursed

*2000 and 2003 Office of Inspector General (OIG) reports on the conditions in dialysis

*2007 - Members of DialysisEthics worked for certification of hemodialysis
technicians in Colorado - bill passed, renewed in 2012 and 2019

*1999 to present - nonviolent dismissed patients returned to their
clinics or placed in other clinics or hospitals over the years

On my tombstone: He was a good kind of crazy

www.dialysisethics2.org
jeannea
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« Reply #3 on: December 04, 2013, 08:05:14 PM »

I thought Italy was also one of the toughest to even be approved for dialysis treatment. That makes it so hard to compare.

I think for profit can work. It's best if it's small corporations with no stock issued. My center is owned by the nephrologists' practice benefitting 5 doctors who put in long hours treating those patients.
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« Reply #4 on: December 05, 2013, 04:29:25 AM »

If you have any credible proof that Italy's program is hard to get into I sure would like to see it!  This sounds like the crap some people from the dialysis companies have been spreading for years.  From what I recall in the early days of dialysis it might have been true, but my understanding is that is no longer true in Europe.

But yes, I agree with you small for-profits can work.  One of the clinics I admired in the early days was Lynchburg Nephrology in Virginia, a pioneer in slow nocturnal (think they got sold).
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Proud member of DialysisEthics since 2000

DE responsible for:

*2000 US Senate hearings

*Verified statistics on "Dialysis Facility Compare"

*Doctors have to review charts before they can be reimbursed

*2000 and 2003 Office of Inspector General (OIG) reports on the conditions in dialysis

*2007 - Members of DialysisEthics worked for certification of hemodialysis
technicians in Colorado - bill passed, renewed in 2012 and 2019

*1999 to present - nonviolent dismissed patients returned to their
clinics or placed in other clinics or hospitals over the years

On my tombstone: He was a good kind of crazy

www.dialysisethics2.org
plugger
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« Reply #5 on: December 06, 2013, 03:23:36 PM »

I mentioned the Italians above.  If somebody out there is curious about dialysis in another country, I suggest visiting Australian nephrologist Dr. John Agar at Home Dialysis Central.  He referred to U.S. dialysis as "bazooka" style dialysis.  Gosh, darn if I don't know what he means: http://forums.homedialysis.org/index.php
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Proud member of DialysisEthics since 2000

DE responsible for:

*2000 US Senate hearings

*Verified statistics on "Dialysis Facility Compare"

*Doctors have to review charts before they can be reimbursed

*2000 and 2003 Office of Inspector General (OIG) reports on the conditions in dialysis

*2007 - Members of DialysisEthics worked for certification of hemodialysis
technicians in Colorado - bill passed, renewed in 2012 and 2019

*1999 to present - nonviolent dismissed patients returned to their
clinics or placed in other clinics or hospitals over the years

On my tombstone: He was a good kind of crazy

www.dialysisethics2.org
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