Medicare Bidding Program for Dallas, Texas is Rife With Errors, Says American Association for Homecare
Posted on: Monday, 7 April 2008, 15:00 CDT
ARLINGTON, Va., April 7, 2008 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- A new Medicare bidding program for durable medical equipment (DME) scheduled to be implemented in the Dallas-Ft. Worth metropolitan area on July 1, 2008, will put many DME providers out of business and could disrupt services for many of the 481,835 Medicare-eligible seniors and people with disabilities in the Dallas area.
The bidding program is scheduled to hit six other metropolitan statistical areas in Texas next year, including Austin, Beaumont, El Paso, Houston, McAllen, and San Antonio.
In late March, DME providers in Dallas and nine other bidding regions throughout the U.S. received letters from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) explaining whether they had been offered a contract, been disqualified from bidding, or bid outside of the bidding range for a product. Those DME providers that did not receive contracts for a given Medicare item or service are shut out of the Medicare program for three years.
The American Association for Homecare has received word from hundreds of DME providers who say they have been improperly disqualified and thereby removed by CMS from the bidding process. That includes about two dozen cases of disqualified bidders in the Dallas, Ft. Worth and Arlington areas.
The congressionally mandated competitive bidding program was designed to reduce the number of DME providers and reduce reimbursement rates for oxygen therapy, hospital beds, wheelchairs, and other types of home-based equipment and care in Medicare. Reimbursement rates are already set by Medicare and reimbursement rates for oxygen have already been cut by nearly 50 percent over the past 10 years. The DME industry has long argued that this new program will needlessly punish established, high-quality providers, reduce the DME industry's focus on service, and harm patient access to care.
The DME industry consists primarily of small to medium-sized businesses serving relatively small service areas. The average DME company receives about 50 percent of its business from Medicare patients. Loss of this business will result in layoffs and business failure for many DMEs.
"The Secretary of Health and Human Services has called home-based healthcare 'radically' more efficient than institutional care, yet the federal government is determined to aggressively dismantle the nation's homecare infrastructure at a time when our healthcare system needs it the most," said Tyler J. Wilson, president of the American Association for Homecare. "DME spending is the smallest sliver of Medicare, less than two percent of spending, and is the slowest-growing segment. Taxpayers may ultimately face higher costs as hospital stays lengthen due to more complicated hospital discharge logistics, more emergency room visits, and cost-shifting from Medicare Part B to Part A services."
The American Association for Homecare is pursuing regulatory, legislative, and legal remedies to allow for review of the cases of those DME providers that have been disqualified and is calling for the suspension of the first round of the bidding program until questions about patient access and harm to DME providers can be fully assessed.
The American Association for Homecare (AAHomecare) represents providers of durable medical equipment and related services and supplies as well as equipment manufacturers. AAHomecare members serve the medical needs of millions of Americans who require home oxygen equipment, wheelchairs and other mobility products, hospital beds, medical supplies, inhalation drug therapy, home infusion, and other medical equipment, therapies, services, and supplies delivered in the patient's home. AAHomecare's provider members operate more than 3,000 home care locations in all 50 states. See http://www.aahomecare.org/.
Contacts:
Michael Reinemer, American Assn. for Homecare, 703-535-1881; michaelr@aahomecare.org
Tilly Gambill, American Assn. for Homecare, 703-535-1896; tillyg@aahomecare.org
American Association for Homecare
CONTACT: Michael Reinemer, +1-703-535-1881, michaelr@aahomecare.org, orTilly Gambill, +1-703-535-1896, tillyg@aahomecare.org, both of AmericanAssociation for Homecare
Web Site: http://www.aahomecare.org/
Source: PRNewswire-USNewswire
Related Articles
- Frost & Sullivan Names Verizon Business Premier North American Provider of Managed IP Telephony Services
- IBM Cognos Honors Niteo Partners as North American Services Partner of the Year for the Third Year in a Row at Cognos Forum
- MESSA Receives National Recognition for Best Practices in Providing Efficient, Cost-Effective Customer Service
- TDG Signs Contract With American Airlines to Equip Boeing 737NG Fleet With UFI
- AT&T to Provide H&R Block With Network Integration Services at New Corporate Headquarters
- University General Hospital Receives Medicare Provider Number
- Research and Markets: Telefonica SA Company Intelligence Report Provides Essential Information On Network Operators And Equipment Manufacturers
- DSL, Cable Modem and PON Chip Sales to Grow Steadily As VoIP and IP Video Services Drive Equipment Upgrades, IDC Finds
- Thai Firm to Provide High-Speed Wireless Multimedia Service
- Sunrise Integrates Telchemy's VQmon VoIP Performance Management Software into Service Verification Equipment
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds