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Ohio Oncology Meeting

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Health care reform has the potential to fundamentally and severely change cancer ... Outreach to the White House on the impact of planned Medicare cuts ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ohio Oncology Meeting


1
Ohio Oncology Meeting
  • Healthcare Reform and the Impact on the Practice
    of Oncology
  • Ted Okon
  • Executive Director
  • November 9, 2009
  • Sandusky, Ohio

2
Summary
  • We will get health care reform legislation
  • It is not a pretty process but the president and
    his party faces Armageddon if it does not pass
  • Health care reform has the potential to
    fundamentally and severely change cancer care
    like never before
  • There are immediate impacts as well as impacts
    around the corner
  • This is now all about the 2010 elections
    Politics, politics, politics
  • It is essential that OHIO practices be as unified
    and involved as possible!!!

3
Status of Reform Legislation
  • House approved health care reform bill (220-215)
  • Passed by 3 votes 39 Democrats voted against 1
    GOP for
  • Kucinich Boccieri only OH Dems voting no
  • The two Senate committees have passed bills
  • Senate leadership is working on merging two bills
  • Merged Senate bill may not come up for a vote
    till right before/after Thanksgiving
  • Next Steps Till Christmas (or beyond)
  • Senate votes on its bill
  • Conference Committee to merge Senate and House
    bills
  • Vote on one final bill
  • Send to the president for signing

4
Beliefs Shaping the Debate
  • The US healthcare system is more driven by profit
    than patient best interests
  • Physicians and hospitals over-diagnose/treat
    based on churning revenue
  • Care is uncoordinated
  • Regional differences in cost/outcomes
    unacceptable
  • Governments role is to supervise/manage the
    health care system
  • Must read The Cost Conundrum (The New Yorker)
    by Gawande

5
House Health Care Reform Legislation H.R. 3962
  • 1,990 pages of law 400,000 words
  • Cost over 1 trillion
  • Increases coverage from 83 to 96
  • Provides subsidies in 2013 to extend coverage
  • Mandates individuals to purchase coverage
  • Bans insurers from denying coverage
  • However, estimated penalties of 167 billion over
    10 years to individuals and businesses not
    purchasing insurance
  • Establishes insurance exchanges for individuals
    and small businesses
  • Creates a government-run public plan
  • Crackdown on insurer unjustified premium
    increases
  • Eliminates insurers antitrust exemption

6
House Health Care Reform Legislation (continued)
  • Expands Medicaid up to 150 of the FPL.
  • Pushes Part B towards bundling of services, care
    coordination, and greater empowerment of CMS to
    make payment changes
  • How it is paid for
  • 460 billion in new income taxes on individuals
  • 400 billion in Medicare Medicaid cuts
  • 13 billion in limiting contributions to FSAs
  • Industry fees and other taxes

7
Lessons from H.R. 3962
  • Do or Die for Democrats to pass health care
    reform
  • Big issues of contention
  • Public plan
  • Abortion
  • Illegal immigrant health care coverage
  • Pelosi last minute deal on abortion sealed the
    vote
  • Pro-abortion did not block the vote but livid
  • Democrat no votes came from moderate-conservativ
    e districts 2010 most vulnerable list
  • This was in reaction to Tuesday night and a
    preview of 2010
  • Sets up Who will blink? scenario in the Senate
    and House moderates or liberals?

8
Senate Bill Best Guess
  • Not yet finalized but indications of how it will
    differ from House bill
  • Almost everyone must obtain coverage through
    employer, on their own, or through the government
  • Employers not required to provide insurance but
    business with 50 employees must pay a fee if
    government subsidizes
  • Tax credits for certain individuals and small
    businesses
  • No denial of coverage
  • Creates state/regional co-ops and public plan
    (???)
  • Initiatives to fundamentally transform the Part B
    payment system
  • Initiatives to bundle care and force coordination
  • Providers with top 10 highest costs docked a 5
    penalty
  • Greater Medicare control in independent (?)
    entity
  • Paid for by taxes and fees
  • Individuals who do not purchase insurance
  • Premium insurance plans
  • Insurance companies, drug companies, and device
    manufacturers

9
Public Plan The Great Debate
  • Government needs to offer a public insurance
    plan
  • Concept is to provide a low cost option that will
    keep private insurers honest
  • Will act as a magnet forcing private insurers to
    decrease costs in order to compete
  • Accordingly, will force insurers to lower
    provider payments
  • Liberals want a strong public plan based on
    Medicare rates 5
  • This will eventually lead to government control
    or simply a one-payer system
  • Moderates want a public plan where HHS negotiates
    rates with providers or no plan at all
  • Topic of great debate in the House and Senate

10
The Doc Fix Political Hot Potato
  • Senate attempted to pull the doc fix out of
    health care reform
  • Voted on S. 1776 to zero out the 21.5 cut and
    repeal the SGR (but no replacement)
  • 53-47 vote could not overcome a filibuster
  • House has taken the same approach H.R. 3961
  • Update for 2010 would be increase in the MEI
  • In 2011, creates separate growth rates and
    conversion factors for EM/Preventive Services
    and all other services
  • Would only include MD services in the growth
    rates
  • Cost of 210 billion over 10 years

11
Impacts on Oncology
  • Current Impacts
  • 2010 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule
  • Cuts to drug administration, consult codes, and
    imaging
  • Audits and changing payment rules
  • Around the Corner Impacts
  • Greater risk sharing on oncology providers
  • Payments based on the oncologist reducing costs
  • Making the primary care physician the medical
    home
  • Making oncology providers a spoke in accountable
    care organizations (ACOs)
  • Government coming between the oncologist and the
    patient
  • Stripping services such as imaging out of the
    practice

12
2010 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule
  • Averted severe cuts in 2010 but cuts phased in
    over 4 years
  • Drug administration payments cut 5 in 2010 19
    by 2013
  • Elimination of consultation codes 1 cut in
    2010
  • EM payments increased by 5 in 2010
  • Payment reductions to diagnostic imaging
  • 38 phased in over 4 years
  • Averted major payment reductions to therapeutic
    radiation
  • Overall 21.5 cut in all physician services
    payments unless Congress acts
  • Even then, fixing this may likely reduce drug
    administration payments

13
Do Not Minimize These
  • RAC audits
  • MIC audits
  • Changes to incident to rule restricting use of
    non-physician services
  • Comparative Effectiveness Research
  • Additional imaging cuts/restrictions the next
    AWP?

14
Drivers of Oncology Impacts
  • Fundamental lack of understanding of what is
    involved in providing cancer care
  • A belief that specialists drive up the cost of
    care so put PCPs in the driver seat medical
    home, gatekeeper, etc.
  • Integrated medical practices are driven by
    profits versus patient quality of care and
    convenience
  • Take special note, if you have in-house imaging
    and radiation
  • Rapidly escalating costs of cancer care are
    excessive
  • Focus on costs rather than quality, outcomes by
    policy makers
  • Policy makers with little/no experience in
    medicine

15
What Oncology Needs to Do
  • Educate policy markers on the complexity and
    trends in cancer care
  • Provide objective data
  • Provide success stories
  • Provide solutions in leading, rather than be led
    by policy makers
  • Fight reimbursement cuts in order to keep the
    cancer care delivery system viable
  • Generate more positive press
  • Become more politically engaged and active!!!

16
COA Position
  • US has the best documented cancer care in the
    world
  • We are in the first stage of crisis due to
    reimbursement cuts
  • We are entering the second stage of crisis as we
    lose oncologists to demand
  • By 2020, short an oncologist for every 1 in 4
    cancer patients
  • Healthcare reform has to correct the problems,
    not exacerbate them
  • As President Obama says, Fix what is broken and
    build on what works

Source US Cancer Care Is Number One, National
Center for Policy Analysis, Brief Analysis No.
596, October 11, 2007.
17
What COA is Doing
  • Providing data and educating policy makers
  • Components of Care and Oral Oncolytics Studies
  • Providing legislative solutions
  • H.R. 3675 and H.R. 1392/S. 1221
  • Fighting Medicare cuts with data and political
    support
  • Creating greater information sharing and unity
    among practices
  • Generating more positive and illuminating
    press/PR
  • Making community oncology stronger politically

18
Collecting Data
  • Components of Care Study
  • Created a committee comprised of all functional
    disciplines within community oncology
  • Identified the clinical and operational
    components of delivering cancer care
  • Fielded a survey to quantify the components of
    care
  • Preliminary results
  • Medicare only covers 55 of cancer care costs
  • Oral Oncolytics Study
  • Identified barriers to use of oral cancer agents
  • Shaping policy in concert with care delivery

19
Educating
  • Over 300 meetings with congressional members and
    staff
  • Hill Education Series on Cancer Care
  • First initiative was Off Label Cancer Drug Use
    Compendia in conjunction with ACCC and US
    Oncology
  • Next is Components of Care Medicare Fee
    Schedule
  • Inviting all House legislative and health staff
  • November 18th
  • Ongoing outreach to CMS/HHS, MedPAC, and others

20
Oncology Legislative Solutions
  • H.R. 3675 National Quality Cancer Care
    Demonstration Project Act of 2009
  • National demonstration program on treatment
    planning and follow-up care planning
  • Developed by a task force of practicing medical
    oncologists
  • Open to all oncology nationwide
  • Provides 300 million in annual funding
  • Summary provision is in Senate Finance bill
  • H.R. 1392/S. 1221 (Prompt pay solution bill)
  • Important for any payment system based on ASP
  • Adds 2 back to drug reimbursement based on ASP
  • Defense against additional drug reimbursement
    cuts
  • Provision was in House Energy Commerce bill

21
Fighting Medicare Cuts
  • Congressional staff arranged HHS/CMS meeting for
    oncology practice administrators
  • 15 administrators presented data and stories,
    highlighting impact on patients and their care
  • Outreach to the White House on the impact of
    planned Medicare cuts
  • Letters from Representatives and Senators to HHS
    Secretary to forestall implementation of Medicare
    payment cuts
  • 113 Representatives signed onto one letter to HHS
    Secretary

22
House Letter to HHS Secretary
23
Information Sharing and Unifying Oncology
  • COA website at www.communityoncology.org
  • News, education, resources, and action items
  • COA Administrators Network
  • Run by and for oncology
    practice administrators
  • Goals of networking practices

    and enhancing information

    sharing
  • A unified oncology is a
    stronger oncology!
  • Need a state representative from MO!!!

24
Oncology Public Relations
  • Articles in major papers NYT, WSJ, WP
  • WSJ War on Specialists
  • OpEds by oncologists in papers around the country
  • TV stories/appearances FOX, local outlets
  • OncologySTAT policy updates
  • Social networking
  • COA YouTube Channel
  • COA on Facebook
  • OncologyCOA, TedOkonCOA, PatrickCobbCOA

25
Increased Political Action
Source Center for Responsive Politics
26
What Ohio Can Do NOW
  • Pull Ohio together in one massive outreach to the
    congressional delegation House and Senate
  • Call attention to the Medicare cuts
  • Outreach to House members/staff on 11/18 Hill
    briefing
  • Follow-up after briefing
  • Specific unified outreach to Senator Brown on
    cuts and prompt pay issue
  • Come to DC as a group for Hill visits
  • Reach out to your media OpEds, letters,
    interviews
  • Oncologists and clinical providers Help us to
    develop proactive solutions for oncology
  • Administrators get involved with your fellow
    administrators through CAN
  • Help build the political clout of oncology
    through COA PAC

27
Support COA
  • Become involved with COA individually and
    practice
  • Contribute to COA!!!
  • Funds go towards advocacy, studies, and public
    relations
  • Contribute to COA PAC!!!
  • Oncology needs to strengthen politically
  • Join a COA working committee
  • Join the Administrators Network team
  • Help bring community oncology together

28
Thank you!
  • Ted Okon
  • tokon_at_COAcancer.org
  • 203-715-0300 (cell)
  • www.communityoncology.org
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