From the Senate perspective the SGRrrr elimination appears
less likely this week. As you may recall, Mr. Baucus and the Senate Finance Committee last
week proposed a $38 billion, three-year band-aid (a continuation of the past
failed approach), but he told me last week at a breakfast meeting that he
thinks they can muster together $150 – $200 billion from somewhere
(cancellation of the war in Afghanistan?) to get closer to eliminating it. The Administration breakthrough decision to shift the $87 billion of injectable
drug costs embedded in SGR from Part B to Part D of Medicare would make the
total fix more likely.
The House (Pelosi, et al) still seems committed to look
for the complete fix this year, but the Senate doesn’t see how it would be paid for (but hey! If SGRrr goes away, what formula
would we use? Why not apply the Medicare Economic Index that the hospitals and
the rest of the system use? This seems to provide annual increases that fairly
closely approximate increases in the cost of doing business).
Keep in mind that even if Congress finds $280 Billion, physicians would not receive any pay increase over the next 10 years
without additional funds. The SGR fix simply eliminates the overt pay cuts.
Since business costs nonetheless continue to rise, new payment options for
quality are also essential in this reform process. While Baucus insists the
Physician Quality Reporting Initiative (PQRI) must continue, the quality improvement bonus attached in the
current proposals are likely to be no more than 2 percent, hardly enough to
motivate the extra work hours and workflow changes practices need to accomplish
to effectively participate.
The ACC and IHI
(Institute for Healthcare Improvement) Hospital-to-Home (H2H) project is
generating great interest. This may be the kind of direction — one that
unfortunately most of our members do not yet appreciate — that is the only
pathway toward needed payment reform and payment increase that could keep pace
with rising costs of business for practices. Given the rising tide to create
reform this year, we will need some Patrick Henrys to ride through all of our
chapters and states to let people know big change is coming -- and won’t be a
tweak of the status quo. Reform doesn’t necessarily have to come out badly -- but
need to make sure we stay at the table.
*** Image from Flickr (vtengr4047). ***