Perspective from The New England Journal of Medicine — Using Shared Savings to Foster Coordinated Care for Dual Eligibles
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Texas Medical Association's curator insight,
April 15, 6:33 PM
From the Texas Legislative Study Group, an interesting collection of facts and statistics about Texas, many of which support the Healthy Vision 2020 recommendations to improve health care in the Lone Star State Delete the scoop?
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Repeal the dual-eligible payment cut
In early 2012, legislators made a funding cut without knowing its true impact, creating a medical emergency for thousands of dual-eligible Texans and the physicians who care for them. “Dual-eligible” patients are low-income seniors and people with disabilities who qualify for both Medicare and Medicaid. In Texas, there are almost 465,000 dual-eligible patients, who are among the sickest and most vulnerable people in our state.
When a physician provides treatment to a dual-eligible patient, Medicare pays the physician 80 percent and Medicaid the remaining 20 percent. Medicare also requires patients to pay an annual deductible — $140 in 2012 — which Medicaid pays because the patients are so poor. However, beginning on Jan. 1, 2012, Texas Medicaid implemented a new policy, limiting what it pays physicians (and other providers) to the maximum of what Medicaid pays for the same service. In most instances, the patient’s physician faces a cut of 20 percent, and potentially even more. Consider these examples:
• Example 1: Established dual-eligible patient has not met any of the Medicare deductible and is seen during a routine office visit. Physician bills Medicare CPT code 99213. Maximum Medicare allowable is $66.90. Medicare pays $0 because deductible has not been met. Medicaid will pay $33.27, the Medicaid allowable for this code. Prior to policy change, physician would have been paid up to the Medicare allowable ($66.90). This is, in essence, a 50-percent payment cut.
• Example 2: Established dual-eligible patient visits physician office for routine visit, Medicare deductible has been met. Physician bills Medicare CPT code 99213. Medicare allowable is $66.90. Medicare pays $53.52, 80 percent of the allowable. Physician bills Medicaid for the remaining 20 percent. Medicaid allowable is $33.27, so no coinsurance will be paid. Under old policy, Medicaid would have paid an additional $13.38 so that physician’s entire payment equaled Medicare’s $66.90 allowable. This is a 20-percent payment cut.
The dual-eligible payment cut unfairly penalizes physicians who care for the sickest and frailest Medicare patients. The policy change hit particularly hard practices in rural and inner-city Texas, along the Mexico border, and many of those serving nursing homes. Those practices serve a disproportionate number of dual-eligible Medicare patients. In addition, the cut is already causing physicians to limit how many dual-eligible patients they are willing to treat, restrict their Medicaid participation, and forego practicing in communities that most need them.