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Medicare Roundup: CMS Recent Decisions

by Astrid Fiano, DOTmed News Writer | May 13, 2008
DOTmed synthesizes
recent government news
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has released several important decisions recently, affecting various areas of the health care industry.

A National Coverage Determination has been issued this month, which expands Medicare coverage of artificial hearts that have been implanted as part of Food and Drug Administration studies, and that meet the CMS' Coverage with Evidence Development (CED) research requirements regarding safety, patient protections, and monitoring. The decision changes previous policy in place since 1986, and now gives opportunities for beneficiaries to gain advantages of new technology. According to CMS Acting Administrator Kerry Weems, the decision also "encourages the completion of FDA post-approval studies." Artificial hearts assist patients who are waiting for donor hearts or those who aren't able to receive transplants. Clinical trials on artificial heart devices have been conducted since 1986, which has indicated to CMS that enough evidence of safety and health outcomes exist for the devices in FDA-approved studies to be covered through Medicare.

CMS has also published the final regulation establishing rate year (RY) 2009 Federal payment rates and policies for long-term care hospitals (LTCHs). LTCHs are considered hospitals with an average Medicare inpatient stay longer than 25 days. There are nearly 400 LTCHs in the U.S., offering acute care treating severely ill patients, or those with complicated medical conditions. The new rate enables quality treatment for those who need long-term care. If a patient is admitted to an LTCH within 60 days after being discharged from another inpatient facility, no second deductable need be paid. Administrator Weems commented that the new rule will encourage LTCHs to "provide compassionate, efficient care to some of Medicare's most severely ill patients." The standard Federal rate for LTCHs is raised by 2.7 percent from the 2008 rate established by Congress in the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Extension Act of 2007 (MMSEA). While the LTCH payments will not include payments for physicians and nonphysician providers who bill Medicare separately, if the cost of the LTCH treating a beneficiary is higher than estimated, Medicare will cover a certain percentage of the excess costs.
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CMS recently initiated a pilot project to encourage Medicare beneficiaries to utilize internet resources to track health care, and facilitate communication with health care providers. The project involves and on-line tool, a Personal Health Record (PHR). The PHR enables beneficiaries collection and access to their health information and their health care services. The CMS has stressed that privacy and security safeguards are instituted for data protection. The pilot test will begin in South Carolina and will run for 12 months. Information from health care providers will be entered in the PHR upon a beneficiary's registration. Prescription drug information will not be automatically entered, but a user may enter his or her own medication information to the PHR.