Short version: The payment your center receives for each treatment and each drug will be cut by some percentage. The centers will have to find a way to make some money even though each patient is paying less. They could get less trained staff, cut back on the drugs you get, cut back on your treatment time, try to not take the worst patients, be cheap with supplies, etc. you imagine the options. In the long run, some centers may go too deeply into the whole to survive and will close. Other centers may never open.
Cuts Could Mean Loss Of Dialysis Care For Thousands Of AmericansHundreds of thousands of Americans who need dialysis care could lose that service next year. That’s if a plan to cut almost 10 percent from costs of drugs used in a dialysis care pass. If you want to read more about the plan, you can see the compete Medicare report at this site http://ofr.gov/ofrupload/ofrdata/2013-16107_pi.pdfIf you want to voice your opinion about the plan to cut suppport for dialysis patients, you can do so online. Just go to this site http://www.regulations.gov/#!home Follow the links to submit a comment.
...... My payments are $3000 per treatment; that's $3000 x 5 = $15,000 a week. You do the math for the year.....
In reality, Medicare pays something in the region of $500/$700 per dialysis session average.
Long and short, the cuts are likely to stay especially given the overwhelmingly apathetic dialysis population where only a very small percentage of patients are involved in dialysis advocacy.
Quote from: Hemodoc on July 27, 2013, 12:25:16 AMLong and short, the cuts are likely to stay especially given the overwhelmingly apathetic dialysis population where only a very small percentage of patients are involved in dialysis advocacy.ESRD patients are some of the worst at self advocacy. Vast majority would rather bitch, moan and play the victim role as opposed to actually trying to do something constructive. Interestingly, over half already rely on some sort of government subsidy/entitlement such as food stamps, title 8 housing, medicaid, etc. Demographically, dialysis patients are not an influential subset of population.
Nor are we a large group either. At 400,000, we are costly but lack the numbers to influence our own outcome even if we were vocal and effective advocates. Nevertheless, that is not an excuse for us to not do more.