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Stakeholders take NOTICE of mounting ­observation status reform legislation

Stakeholders take NOTICE of mounting ­observation status reform legislation

In mid-March, the U.S. House of Representatives unanimously approved the Notice of Observation Treatment and Implication for Care Eligibility ­(NOTICE) Act (H.R. 876). As a result, the bill is now poised to become the first to gain legal standing among a collection of proposed legislation aimed at remedying today’s fallout from observation status.

Reforming this outpatient designation?which leaves affected Medicare beneficiaries eligible only for Part B coverage?has drawn support from an unlikely assemblage of healthcare stakeholders in the acute, postacute, and beneficiary advocacy spheres.

"We’ve been working very closely with a very broad coalition of groups around [observation status], and it’s a coalition of groups where sometimes we’re on different sides of issues, but as it pertains to this issue, we’ve been completely and totally united," says Clifton J. Porter II, senior vice president of government relations at the American Health Care Association, a national trade association for long-term care providers.

The reason behind this widespread traction: Today’s heavy-handed application of observation status is having devastating effects on those in acute and postacute settings. The designation often disrupts a beneficiary’s eligibility for Medicare coverage in SNFs following a hospital stay, sparking patient confusion and potentially narrowing the client pool for long-term care providers.

In addition, the outpatient designation severely limits Medicare coverage in the hospital itself, ­slapping beneficiaries with a copayment for each individual service rendered during an observation stay instead of the one-time deductible granted during the Part A inpatient alternative. In addition, patients are expected to pay for prescription charges that accumulate during an observation stay.

Because of these potential liabilities, observation status has traditionally been reserved for patients who undergo brief hospital stints, during which time clinicians are charged with assessing whether they are ill enough to warrant inpatient admission or well enough to return home. However, as Recovery Auditors (RA) have ramped up scrutiny on the appropriateness of inpatient stay determinations, hospitalists have become much more liberal in their use of observation status, applying it to stays as long as a week, says Diane Brown, BA, CPRA, director of postacute education at HCPro, a division of BLR, in Danvers, Massachusetts. She underscores the huge impact on beneficiaries, many of whom are left in the dark about their outpatient status and its ramifications until long after their stay has ended.

"The beneficiaries who weren’t aware that they hadn’t been officially admitted come out of the hospital, and then they get whacked with a bill," says Brown.

And underlying the recent outcrop of beneficiaries under observation is a flawed foundational concept that fails to account for the clinical services provided in the hospital, says Ann M. Sheehy, MD, MS, associate professor and division head of hospital medicine at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health.

"We can deliver the same exact care to two patients that are in the beds next to each other?one is observation, one is inpatient?for three nights, and the inpatient gets to go to a nursing home and have the Medicare coverage; the outpatient does not," she explains. "That’s just really hard to swallow."

 

Flying under RA radars

Observation status has been a provision of the Medicare benefit since the program’s inception in 1965, but healthcare providers attribute the backlash facing beneficiaries today to the instatement of the nationwide Recovery Audit Contractor Program (now known simply as the Recovery Audit Program) nearly half a century later.

RAs are charged with combating reported instances of fraud and abuse throughout the healthcare system by detecting and recouping improper payments, such as those for noncovered, incorrectly coded, and duplicative services. However, because RAs are paid on a contingency basis, healthcare providers argue there’s a financial incentive for them to target practices that will yield the biggest monetary reward while providing the least grounds for contest, a strategy that Brown says has inspired them to take a hard line on regulations with obvious gray areas, like observation status.

"If you’re going to be paid that way . . . you want to find the low-hanging fruit," says Brown. "[Observation status is] a broad-based rule . . . and unless you have a lot of concrete examples to support a broad-based rule, nobody knows how it really works, and so the RAs took advantage of that."

Since CMS began phasing in the national RA program as directed by the Tax Relief and Health Care Law of 2006, the prevalence of observation status designation has soared. According to a March 2014 report by the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, the number of outpatient observation claims increased 88% between 2006 and 2012?a trend that runs counter to financial motivation for hospitals, which are paid less for care delivered to a patient under observation than for that provided during an inpatient stay, even if the services are equivalent in both cases.

For their part, RAs deny responsibility for the climb. ­After a July 2014 Senate hearing that addressed observation status, the American Coalition for Healthcare Claims Integrity, an RA trade association, issued a statement stressing that the contractors audit less than 2% of Medicare records from any given provider and only focus on CMS-approved billing hot spots.

"While our coalition agrees that the use of observation status has evolved from its initial intent and administrators should work to clarify these payment policies, the suggestion that the Recovery Audit Contractor (RAC) program has caused this issue is false," Becky Reeves, spokesperson for the group, said in the statement.

But this alleged audit rate of less than 2% doesn’t hold for providers across the board, according to Sheehy, who points to a recent study she led that found RAs performed complex Part A audits on 8% of the total inpatient encounters had by three academic hospitals from 2010 to 2013. Complex reviews, as opposed to their automated or semi-automated counterparts, produce the vast majority of RA recoupments.

Regardless of disputes over the reasons behind observation status spikes, CMS introduced the two-midnight rule in 2013 in an effort to curtail them. Through the provision, the agency sought to clarify that hospitals can consider beneficiaries whose stays are expected to last at least two nights inpatients without the fear of RA review. But enforcement of the rule has been repeatedly delayed since its introduction, lambasted by hospitals as arbitrary, reductive, and potentially punitive toward innovations used to reduce lengths of stay.

Because many healthcare providers maintain that hikes in observation status are tied to RA scrutiny, Sheehy thinks major reform in both domains is necessary to make progress throughout the industry.

To that end, CMS and a couple of its RA contractors are currently locked in disputes over the terms of new contracts, which propose revisions to the way RAs are paid?a possible effort by CMS to discourage faulty recoupment of payments and to unclog RA decision appeal logjams.

SNF implications

Although hospitals are at the heart of the observation status crisis, those in the postacute sector are also feeling the fallout. SNFs are often the next stop for recently hospitalized patients whose stays have been deemed observation, such as those who will require short-term intensive therapy services after a medical illness. But days spent under observation don’t count toward the three consecutive days a beneficiary must remain in the hospital before Medicare coverage for subsequent nursing home care kicks in?a rule that is itself contentious. Some say the requirement flies in the face of continuum-wide pushes to return beneficiaries to the community as often and as quickly as possible.

"The reality is that the sooner a patient is out of the hospital, the better," says Porter. "Requiring a patient to be in a hospital for three days before they can access a benefit that gets them out of the hospital and ultimately on their way home seems a bit archaic to me."

And now that the requirement is increasingly tangled with observation stays, more and more patients are disqualified from SNF coverage, forcing them to choose between paying for rehabilitation services entirely out of pocket and jeopardizing their recovery by forgoing the follow-up care deemed necessary by their doctors.

Sheehy recalls the first time she witnessed the detrimental effects of such a decision. It was 2010, and she had just treated a woman who had stayed three nights in the hospital following a recent cancer diagnosis. At the time of discharge, Sheehy decided to order nursing home services for the patient, who was weak and dehydrated. But when Sheehy informed her case manager of this plan, she was told that the patient?a longtime Medicare contributor?would have to pay the cost in full because she had been under observation during her entire stay.

"All she should have had to do was worry about getting better," says Sheehy. "Now she was worried about her bill and how she was going to take care of herself at home because she didn’t have the resources to pay for a nursing home on her own."

But not all patients are granted even this modicum of warning that subsequent services won’t be covered?a shortfall that saddles SNF providers with the task of verifying the hospital admission status of prospective clients and communicating bad news to those whose nursing home stay wouldn’t be covered by Medicare.

Brown says hospitals sometimes compound this burden by retrospectively deciding to tag a stay as observation, potentially leaving nursing home providers as blindsided as residents come billing time.

 

The NOTICE Act only sets stage for reform

These knowledge gaps are precisely what theNOTICE Act targets. The bill would amend the Social Security Act with a provision requiring hospitals to provide oral and written notice to patients placed under observation for more than 24 hours, the reason for this designation, and its implications for service coverage within 36 hours of the classification, or, if the stay is shorter, upon discharge.

Advocates say the bill is an important move toward empowering beneficiaries to make informed decisions about their healthcare.

"They deserve to know [their status] in the hospital, so I think this transparency measure is a very good one," says Sheehy, though she adds that the bill would also increase pressure on hospital employees, who would be expected to create, supply, and test comprehension of additional paperwork, thereby upholding a regulation that doesn’t sit well with many. "It kind of leaves us holding the bag defending the policy which many of us don’t believe in," she explains.

But this burden may be more emotional than operational. Porter notes that similar requirements have been successfully implemented in some states, and that since hospitals are already expected to supply beneficiaries with notifications about many other services, one more variation shouldn’t be too hard to integrate into the workflow.

In addition to better preparing patients for care costs, Sheehy says the NOTICE Act would provide a bonus benefit for SNFs by ensuring new beneficiaries are already aware of their eligibility for Medicare coverage, thereby heading off painful conversations and payment disputes down the road.

First introduced last July and reintroduced in February of this year, the NOTICE Act breezed through the House in March. Because of its smooth sailing thus far, experts believe it’s a matter of when?not if?the legislation will become law.

"It passed the House unanimously, which doesn’t happen often in Congress, and I would venture to guess that the same will occur in the Senate," says Porter.

 

Digging deeper

Although advocates applaud the NOTICE Act for shining a light on the current state of observation status, they note that it doesn’t address the root of the problem.

"This does nothing to change observation policy," says Sheehy. "We really want this to be the first step and not the last step. We don’t want Congress to feel like they’ve . . . done something on observation and then not move forward on real observation reform."

Sheehy and Porter point to one recent bill in particular that digs deeper into the impact of observation status on beneficiaries seeking subsequent SNF care. The Improving Access to Medicare Coverage Act?first introduced in previous Congresses and revived this March as S. 843 in the Senate and H.R. 1571 in the House?would update Medicare policy to allow time spent under hospital observation to count toward the three-day inpatient stay required for Medicare coverage of subsequent SNF care.

Porter is in strong favor of this bill, as well as one that would rescind the three-day prior hospitalization requirement altogether: the Creating Access to Rehabilitation for Every Senior (CARES) Act of 2015 (H.R. 290), which was reintroduced in January.

"The three-day stay requirement . . . is as old as the program, but healthcare clearly has changed dramatically in the last 50 years, so there is a gross need for modernization of this particular policy," says Porter.

While the NOTICE Act and its more reform-oriented counterparts continue making their congressional rounds, Porter says stakeholders can aid the cause by forming coalitions or joining existing efforts to inform potential residents and the community at large about the current state of observation status, its damaging tie-in with the three-day stay rule, and the efforts underway today to remedy it. He also recommends contacting local members of Congress to further underscore these urgent issues.

In addition to widespread displays of support, Porter thinks the passage of either reform-driven bill hinges on the assumptions the Congressional Budget Office makes when calculating potential costs of their enactment. However, he says, their basic math makes sense.

"It is clearly a lot less expensive to be in a nursing facility receiving rehab than it is to be in a hospital under the acute care benefit," Porter explains.

Sheehy adds that bills centered on observation status reform could also potentially boost SNFs’ bottom lines by increasing eligibility for Medicare coverage of the services they provide and, in turn, making their care more affordable for prospective residents.

But even more importantly than the potential government and provider savings, Porter says severing the link between observation status and the three-day rule would speed beneficiaries’ recovery and return home.

"We heal better at home; there are less germs at home," he explains. "Doing away with the three-day stay, which would effectively solve the related issue of observation stays, would be . . . beneficial for the patient and their outcomes, and that’s the most important result."

HCPro.com – Billing Alert for Long-Term Care

Medical Malpractice Reform is Even Harder Than it Sounds

The notion of medical malpractice reform is fraught with difficulty. At the heart of it is the reaction to individuals and their families to injury or death resulting from human error on the part of the medical system. As a people, the two things we have zero tolerance for are errors in our financial processes and our medical processes. The difference is that when it comes to finance, remuneration is easily accepted at the face value of the error leaving it to the judicial system to figure out any punishment that is necessary. With medical malpractice, however, there is the concept of trying to make whole the injured party, which is subjective with an unknowable future cost, plus the inherent empathy we all feel as human beings for medical damage.

The Public Handicapping

As an example, if a person loses their sight after undergoing a procedure that was undertaken to make the individual well but it goes poorly due to a mistake the physician makes, even though we know the individual can live out their life, there is such an abhorrence to the very concept that a jury of peers is predisposed to not only making the victim whole, but in some way seriously punishing the “perpetrator;” partly for the victim and partly for ourselves. Thus medical malpractice reform is handicapped by a public and congress attempting to preserve the ability to punish the perpetrators of such an unfathomable act.

Universal Health Care

The truth is that we need universal health care to solve this dilemma. If someone is blinded by poor medical treatment, as abhorrent the thought is, their medical treatment would be guaranteed for life, and the calculation of the other costs for their life becomes more finite. Transportation, accommodations such as animal assistance, home cleaning, shopping, and all the things one needs to survive comfortably become calculable–without rampant emotion. It comes down to how we balance the costs of such egregious injury from medical malpractice with the need to keep the costs of medicine under control. Preventable injuries, as deplorable as they are, should not be a windfall profit to the victim, yet the responsibility for the damage must be atoned for by the perpetrator in accordance with our laws against violence against others. As with all forms of justice, the goal is to “make whole” the victim as much as can be accomplished, while holding true to the concept of justice.

To learn much more about finding a good dental malpractice lawyer, visit malpractice-history.com where you’ll find this and much more, including malpractice statistics and advice.

Chen Zhu: Chinese Medical Reform Is Difficult To See A Doctor On The Medical Care Of Your

Chinese medical reform for “medical treatment difficult and expensive” prescription pilot reform of public hospitals will be launched in 12 cities

“China’s medical reform is aimed ‘medical treatment is difficult and expensive’ prescription, to achieve the basic medical insurance system, mitigation and reduction of diseases caused by individual families as bankruptcy, improve basic health care system to facilitate the people for medical treatment, to promote equality of basic public services prevention of major diseases. This is the National Health Minister Chen Zhu has made medical reform in China today, the latest interpretation.

Chen Zhu told the media group said in an interview, “how to 1.3 billion people in urban and rural areas to provide a basic medical services and public health service system and the corresponding security system, this challenge has no precedent in the world.”

His view, “see” the main allocation of medical resources is unreasonable, especially in high-quality medical resources are concentrated in big cities, people find a good doctor is not easy; “your doctor”, on the one hand is significantly higher health care costs than people’s incomes increase, while the proportion of individuals to pay excessive.

He pointed out that the current public hospital reform is difficult, but also hot, “though not easy to control, but it focused on the doctor for treatment of many contradictions, it must be reformed.” This year, the pilot reform of public hospitals will be at the National 10 two cities started. He said that “any health care reform is very difficult to please everybody.” Deepening medical reform so long and arduous nature, must be well prepared.

He said, industrialization, urbanization, population aging, disease and ecological change and so will change Medicine Health brings new challenges, people are constantly on the medical and health services, new demands and expectations. The “establishment of basic medical and health system, improve the national health standards, and achieve universal access to basic medical and health services, great goal, it is the most important tasks of health.”

From the “barefoot doctors” to the Health Minister, Chen Zhu’s personal feelings of helplessness over lack of medical treatment, but also witnessed six years of New China and the Development of the medical and health undertakings. Liberation is called “sick man of Asia” China’s per capita life expectancy is only 30 years old, but has now reached 70-year-old, breaking the Life “70 rare ancient” limitations.

Review of the last century, a serious lack of medical treatment in rural areas in China fifty years time, Chen Zhu recalls, “National medical staff only 100 000, only two beds per million people in low levels of technology, medicine and equipment industry is almost blank. “By last year, the country already has 278 000 health institutions, health care team six million people and 2.8 hospital beds per thousand population. Overall health care quality and the main health indicators have significantly improved the medical services has improved significantly, and has formed a complete system of medicine.

New rural Cooperation Health care system so that Chinese farmers for the first time with the main resource of the medical security system, now covers more than one billion urban and rural residents, multi-level medical security system framework is taking shape.

The face of influenza H1N1 Influenza Epidemic , Chen Zhu said: thousands of cases of death in the global context, China has no influenza A H1N1 influenza deaths; the world’s first complete swine H1N1 influenza vaccine clinical trials, and became the first state can be applied to the vaccine.

He stressed that the six years, China has basically wiped out smallpox, filariasis, to achieve the objectives of the World Health Organization’s polio, diphtheria children had no reported cases for two consecutive years.

Once known as the “national disease” of hepatitis B through vaccination and other measures have also been effectively controlled. Since to hepatitis B vaccine into national immunization programs, the nation’s rate of hepatitis B virus carrier dropped 7 percent from 11 percent, infant carrier rate is less than 2%.

Chen Zhu said the Chinese health system in the deepening of China but also for the 15 children under the age of catch-hepatitis B vaccine. For the year five years-hepatitis B virus carrier rate dropped to 6 percent below, as soon as possible, “Hepatitis B power” take off the hat.

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Medical Malpractice and the Health Care Reform Bill

Medical malpractice is definitely one of the most traumatizing accident that could ever happen to an individual. Why? Medical professionals are supposed to be the people that should look after our health and welfare and because they are professionals we trust that they are very much knowledgeable with regards to the field that they have been practicing. So the idea that they might make a mistake that could result to injuries or even death, is really such a horrifying thought. Medical professionals cannot afford to make a mistake but it doesn’t that they won’t ever make one. Medical malpractice is a very common accident that takes place in a hospital. This happens in an event when a medical personnel commits a mistake, no matter how small and simple it is, that is due to being negligent and careless. Medical malpractice doesn’t only involve someone’s death due to errors, that is a common misconception. Some examples of medical malpractice are:

Prescribing the wrong medicine due to absentmindedness

Failure to check on a patient’s medical background before doing any treatment

When doctors and nurses fail to recognize or choose to ignore a medical problem that resulted to a lethal injury and in the worst case scenario, even death.

Delay in treatment

Victims of medical malpractice can file a lawsuit against the violating personnel and the hospital itself and demand for the appropriate compensation. One can file a medical malpractice claim with the assistance of a capable personal injury lawyer that specially caters to this kind of cases. You can forget about fighting this legal battle without the aid of a lawyer because chances are you will only lose. A personal injury lawyer can give you a guarantee that you will be paid with no less than what you really deserve.

Fortunately with the new health care reform bill, victims of personal injury cases such as medical malpractice have now access to a number of benefits. Traditionally victims of other personal injury cases such as vehicular accidents have a no-fault insurance that is protecting them, but unfortunately medical malpractice victims do not have this kind of protection. But with the new healthcare system bill, it is highly likely that it is going to benefit many medical malpractice victims.

First benefit is that medical malpractice victims will continue to get medical care and attention until to the point that their quality of life is better. Second, if that individual decides to file a medical malpractice claim against the responsible party, medical practitioners who are responsible in treating the individual will document the injuries that the patient has suffered and this can be used as evidence in court. Third, liable parties love to get to the malpractice victims first and make low-ball offers before they could even talk to a personal injury lawyer. They would try to settle it quickly with a cash compensation, and usually malpractice victims are desperate enough that they would accept right away. With the new health reform bill, they won’t feel as vulnerable because they are aware that they are covered by the healthcare system.

Andre Paul B. Reynolds is a leisure writer who enjoys sharing information about Orange County personal injury lawyer and slip fall lawyer Orange County as well as other interesting topics.

Speak Up About Healthcare Reform

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is seeking comment on how it can create a more patient-centered healthcare system that adheres to the key principles of affordability, accessibility, quality, innovation, and empowerment. An Executive Order President Trump issued on Jan. 20, entitled, “Minimizing the Economic Burden of the Patient Protection and Affordable […]
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Trump Addresses Congress on Healthcare Reform

During a Joint Address to Congress, Feb. 28, President Trump called on Democrats and Republicans to repeal and replace Obamacare with reforms that expand choice, increase access, lower costs, and provider better healthcare. “Mandating every American to buy government-approved health insurance was never the right solution for our country,&#8
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