Unless Congress intervenes by the end of the year, physicians are scheduled to face a 5.1% cut in Medicare payments starting Jan. 1, 2007.
Officials at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services published the proposed physician fee schedule changes in the Aug. 22 issue of the Federal Register; the final regulation is expected in the fall. The proposed cut, which comes on the heels of years of pay freezes and minor increases, is likely to force some physicians to stop accepting new Medicare patients, several physicians told RHEUMATOLOGY NEWS. About 45% of physicians surveyed by the American Medical Association in February and March of this year reported that they would either decrease or stop seeing new Medicare patients if Medicare payments were reduced by 5% in 2007. The AMA surveyed more than 8,000 physicians, including both members and nonmembers.
That trend has already begun in some communities. Dr. Michael McAdoo, a family physician in Milan, Tenn., who works in a four-physician practice, stopped taking new Medicare patients about 3 years ago. “We saw this coming,” he said.
Now, with potentially deeper cuts on the horizon, he is considering stopping his hospital coverage and has begun limiting the number of Medicare patients he sees each day. In Milan, a town of about 10,000, there is only one physician in the community who is still accepting new Medicare patients. “I anticipate this will probably get worse,” Dr. McAdoo said.
Over time, there will likely be access to care problems in rheumatology as well, said Dr. Michael Schweitz, vice president of the Coalition of State Rheumatology Organizations and a rheumatologist in West Palm Beach, Fla. He has already started to hear about physicians who are not accepting new Medicare patients, though the practice is not widespread, he said.
And for physicians who care for a large number of Medicare patients and aren't willing to limit access, the cut will mean a significant drop in their take-home pay, Dr. Schweitz said.
The cuts are especially tough on general internists and other primary care physicians who already face difficulty in recruiting young physicians to their practices, said Dr. Yul Ejnes, an internist in Cranston, R.I., and chair of the board of governors of the American College of Physicians.
Many physicians have been willing to continue to see Medicare patients despite the falling reimbursement rates, Dr. Ejnes said, but lawmakers can't count on that indefinitely.
In his practice, about 20%–30% of his patients are Medicare beneficiaries, so Dr. Ejnes said he expects to see an impact on his bottom line due to the projected cuts. The impact could be greater if private insurance companies that tie their payments rates to Medicare choose to lower their payments at the same time.
The cuts are also likely to result in access issues beyond Medicare beneficiaries, he said. For example, if a physician has to cut back on staff because of Medicare payment cuts, that will affect all patients. And if a physician chooses to retire early, that affects thousands of patients who have to seek care elsewhere. “The impact is on the system as a whole,” Dr. Ejnes said.
The proposed cut comes just a few weeks after CMS officials announced plans to change the way Medicare pays for evaluation and management services, with physicians who provide more cognitive services getting a bigger piece of the Medicare pie. But those increases to primary care physicians are likely to be nearly wiped out by the projected payment cuts based on the sustainable growth rate (SGR) formula.
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