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R.
Lewis Dark: Chipping Away at Laboratory Reimbursement
Proposed new Medicare rules by the Office of the Investigator General (OIG) dealing with"discriminatory billing practices" and"usual charges" should be seen as part of a larger trend. The government doesn't have the money to pay for Medicare and Medicaid. Thus, it is exploring indirect ways to reduce the amount of money it pays providers.
As you will read on pages 2-5, the OIG's publication of the proposed new rules in the Federal Register last month is just the newest in a series of attempts to align a law passed years ago with today's healthcare pricing practices. According to this law, no provider should bill Medicare for more than its"customary charge." Back in the days of fee-for-service medicine, this was a relatively easy thing to do.
But the 1990s brought a host of new contracting and pricing models to the American healthcare system. Not surprisingly, bureaucrats in the federal healthcare programs fell behind developments in the marketplace. So this latest attempt to offer more precise guidance on the subject of discriminatory billing practices is laudable. But I would like to suggest that the proposed new rules represent a new regulatory cycle. Medicare officials recognize that many providers are willing to provide healthcare services for prices that are significantly below Medicare.
Focus, for the moment, on the laboratory industry. It is tough to justify a situation where a laboratory performs a test for a physician's patient, then client bills the physician for, say, $5.00. (Of course, the physician will then turn around and bill the private insurance company for a greater amount and pocket the difference.) The lab, doing the same test for a Medicare patient, generally bills the Medicare program for its full reimbursement, which, in our hypothetical example, might be $15 or $20.
It seems to me that, sooner or later, senior policymakers within the government, whose mission is to see that Medicare does not pay more than private insurers for similar services, will recognize this situation as one which needs correction. Whether that is motive behind this round of proposed new rules is not for me to say. But I can read all the tea leaves. Client bill arrangements and heavily-discounted fee-for-service contracts between labs, insurers, and IPAs certainly expose this industry, collectively, to a reasonable claim that Medicare is not getting the lab industry's"usual charge."
OIG Moves to Address"Usual Charge" Issue
"Discriminatory billing practices" is target
of new rules published on September 15
CEO SUMMARY: Federal regulators are taking another crack at defining"usual charges." Language in the proposed rules published last month precisely defines which payers should be included in determining"usual charges" and what charge basis to use for specific payers. Once effective, the new rules will have financial impact on many laboratories, particularly those known to offer clients heavy discounts.
No Disruptive Technology
In Lab Industry's Future
Experts discuss trends and technologies
which give labs new testing capabilities
CEO SUMMARY: As a variety of new diagnostic technologies moves through the development pipeline and into widespread clinical use, the scientific knowledge and skill sets needed by laboratory staff and management will change. The emphasis in laboratory medicine will evolve to include more molecular technology, but this evolution will proceed incrementally, giving all laboratories time to adapt.
Dark Index: Two Blood Brothers Ramp Up
Marketing of New Lab Assays
National lab firms launch campaigns to promote
their versions of colorectal cancer screening tests
INTELLIGENCE:
"Talking Tubes"
May soon Be
In Nation's Labs
Transitions: Toronto Medical Laboratories
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