Title: Medicare 101: Policy and Process
1Medicare 101 Policy and Process
- ACC Legislative Conference
- September 18, 2006
2Session Objectives
- Provide update on changes in Medicare physician
payment for 2007 - Explain impact of five year review, new practice
expense methodology, and DRA imaging cut - Discuss background of SGR formula and physician
update for 2007
3Medicare the big picture
- 336 billion spent in 2005
- 2.7 of GDP in 2005
- 7.3 of GDP by 2035
4Medicare 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
5Medicare 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
6Part B trends
- Expenditure growth will exceed GDP growth by at
least 6 over the next decade - Beneficiary out of pocket costs and premiums will
grow faster than income
7Part C
- Medicare managed care plans (Medicare Advantage)
- Paid for by Part A and B funding streams
8Medicare Part D
- Prescription drug coverage
- Paid for by general revenue and beneficiary
premiums
9Medicare 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
102007 Physician payment changes
- Five year review of RBRVS
- New practice expense methodology
- DRA cut to in-office imaging
11Five year review of RBRVS
- CMS reviews the RBRVS every five years
- 14 Cardiology procedures were reviewed
- RVUs for two nuclear cardiology services were cut
wall motion, ejection fraction - All others remain at same level
12Five year review of RBRVS
- CMS proposed large increases for many evaluation
and management (EM) services - For example, 99214 payment will increase from 83
to 90
13Five year review of RBRVS
- Budget neutrality requirement
- CMS proposed 10 reduction to be applied to all
work RVUs - Alternative is 5 reduction in conversion factor
- Impact of budget neutrality options varies by
service
14Practice expense
- New method will cut Medicare payments to
cardiology by 4 over four years - PE RVUS for imaging and other technical component
procedures decrease - PE RVUs for EM, interventional, and EP procedures
increase
15New practice expense formula
- Calculate direct practice expense portion of RVUs
with a bottom-up approach instead of current
top-down method - Eliminate non-physician work pool (NPWP)
- Use supplemental practice expense data from
cardiology and other specialties. - Include clinical labor in indirect cost formula
16Top down vs. bottom-up
- Right now, CMS uses a complex algorithm to
calculate specialty-specific direct and indirect
practice expense pools - Pools are based on three data sources
- AMA data on physician practice expenses and work
hours - Medicare utilization data
- RUC data on physician time for each code
17Top-down vs. bottom up
- Physicians developed estimates of the direct
practice expenses for each code - The formula allocates each specialtys pool to
its codes based on the direct practice cost
estimates
18New method for direct expenses
- CMS proposed to calculate direct practice expense
RVUs only on the direct practice expense inputs
developed by the PEAC a bottom-up approach. - Eliminates the need for specialty-specific direct
practice expense pools and specialty-specific
direct costs for each code.
19Non-physician work pool
- Services without physician work RVUs (e.g.,
technical component services) are in
non-physician work pool (NPWP). - Practice expense RVUs for NPWP services are based
on pre-1999 charged-based RVUs. - NPWP was created because CMS did not have
adequate data for these services. - NPWP buffered some of the expected cuts in
practice expense RVUs for cardiology.
20Eliminate non-physician work pool
- CMS believes data is now adequate to apply
general methodology to NPWP services. - In general, this results in cuts for NPWP
services. - This change was anticipated. Establishing NPWP
was always characterized as a stop-gap measure.
21Indirect cost formula
- Current method calculates indirect cost part of
the RVUs from work RVUs and direct costs - CMS proposed to include clinical labor costs for
services without work RVUs
22Supplemental surveys
- Congress required CMS to set up a process for
specialties to submit supplemental data on
practices expenses - Cardiology conducted a survey and submitted data
showing much higher expenses than the AMA data - Without this data, the new method would be much
more harmful to cardiology
23DRA Imaging payment cut
- August NPRM outlines implementation of DRA cap
on payments for in-office imaging services - Payment for the technical component of an imaging
procedure cant be higher than the payment under
the hospital outpatient prospective payment
system (HOPPS)
24DRA imaging cut
- DRA will cost cardiology about 132 million in
2007 - Nuclear cardiology, vascular imaging are the most
severely affected
25Payment update for 2007
- CMS projects a 5.1 percent cut in the Medicare
conversion factor for physician services in 2007 - Total impact on cardiology from all changes is a
7 percent cut in total Medicare payments
26How 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)
27SGR
- Put in place to control growth in spending on
physician services - Link 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
28SGR 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 -
29Calculating the annual fee schedule update
- Annual update to the conversion factor is the
product of - Medicare Economic Index (MEI)
- Update Adjustment Factor
30Update Adjustment Factor Formula
- .75 Target spending06 Actual spending06
- Actual spending06
-
- .33 Target spending 96 06 Actual spending96
06 - Actual spending05 SGR06
-
31Annual update
- Statute defines a floor and ceiling for the UAF
- UAF cant be more than MEI 3 or less than MEI
-7 - Final 2007 update MEI 7
32Flaws with UAF
- Setting of target SGR and all its flaws
- Calculation of actual expenditures
- Cumulative aspect of formula
33Sources of spending growth
- Increasing volume and intensity of office visits
- Minor procedures
- Imaging services
- Laboratory tests
- Physician-administered drugs
34ACC Position
- SGR system is fatally flawed
- Cannot account for technological advances and
expansion of medical knowledge - Inappropriately linked to GDP
- Including the cost of drugs overstates spending
that is under physician control - Cumulative nature of system means the problem can
only get worse
35Alternatives to SGR
- Annual update linked to MEI?
- Pay for performance?
- New formula to calculate the target?
- Separate targets by region, type of service?
36ACC contacts
- Rebecca Kelly
- Denise Garris Coding and Reimbursement
- Sergio Santiviago Coverage
- Henry McCants Local carriers
37Thank You