Enrollees will have to pay more for DME. A sharp increase in Medicare Part B premiums and deductibles is on its way in 2005 - the first increase in premiums since 1991.
Beneficiaries can expect premiums to rise by 17 percent next year, the Department of Health and Human Services announced Sept. 3. And three-fourths of that hike is attributable to additional Part B costs rung up under the Medicare Modernization Act.
Your patients can expect a monthly Part B premium increase of $11.60 to $78.20, up from $66.60 in 2004, HHS says.
For Medicare Part A, the deductible for 60 days of inpatient hospital coverage will be $912, up $36 from $876. Part B will increase to $110.
The premium and deductible increases coupled together were a "double whammy for America's 40 million Medicare beneficiaries," says Rep. Pete Stark (D-CA), ranking member on the House Ways and Means Health Subcommittee. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Mark McClellan says the hike is part of creating an "enhanced Medicare."
At least 20 percent of HHAs also have to pick two other quality measures to focus on and meet or exceed the national target rate for those measures, the draft explains. The proposal is online at
The treatment still must meet the rather stringent coverage criteria, CMS reminds providers (see Eli's HCW, Vol. XIII, No. 12, p. 92).
The problem is that Medicare actually covers maintenance and servicing every three months for parenteral pumps, CMS notes in an Aug. 27 transmittal (Change Request 3405). So starting Sept. 27, DMERCs will begin using a new remark code for the pumps, N218. The new code will say, "for the time period specified in the contract or coverage manual" instead of six months.
The layoffs are part of a company restructuring aimed at "preserving the company's stability through a time of industry change and challenge," it says. The company laid off about 200 workers in January and has an FBI probe pending against it.
The DMERCs continue to make wheelchair coverage decisions based on the coverage criteria "clarification" that CMS supposedly rescinded (see Eli's HCW, Vol. XIII, No. 12, p. 92), the Scooter Store charges. "The Scooter Store actively is appealing denied claims worth millions of dollars in Medicare reimbursements for power wheelchairs already delivered that were prescribed by patients' personal physicians," President Mike Pfister says in the release.
The company continues to employ about 1,000 workers, it says.
The acquisition will contribute about $6.5 million in annual revenues starting next year, Amedisys expects. And the company continues to be on the lookout for multi-site agencies to acquire, it adds.