Conference Coverage

MedPAC urges CMS to curb low-value care


 

REPORTING FROM MEDPAC


Paul Ginsburg, PhD, commissioner and senior fellow in economic studies at the Brookings Institution, Washington, suggested that, for any new procedure or drug, initial coverage is always provisional for a certain length of time, which would force CMS to revisit coverage decisions.

“If there is no evidence, the coverage ends,” Dr Ginsburg said. “If there is positive evidence, the coverage proceeds.”

However, as commissioner Rita Redberg, MD, of the University of California, San Francisco, said of CMS, even with tools to cut coverage, its hands may be tied by outside forces. “CMS needs a lot more political cover.”

Dr. Rita Redberg at the April 5, 2018, MedPAC meeting Gregory Twachtman/MDedge News

Dr. Rita Redberg

She recalled a December 2007 CMS proposal to cut back reimbursement for cardiac CT scans to symptomatic patients and to only within the context of an approved clinical trial. Three months later, the agency withdrew the proposed national coverage decision and left it to local carriers to determine whether the procedure would be covered.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Cutting Edge Technology in Dermatology: Virtual Reality and Artificial Intelligence
MDedge Dermatology
Medicare Part D plans get more flexibility to make midyear changes
MDedge Dermatology
MDedge Daily News: Could gut bacteria trigger lupus?
MDedge Dermatology
Open enrollment 2018: Plan selections down slightly
MDedge Dermatology
MDedge Daily News: Antibiotic resistance leads to ‘nightmare’ bacteria
MDedge Dermatology
Health IT ‘under-users’ outnumber ‘super-users’
MDedge Dermatology
Patient advocacy groups take in millions from drugmakers. Is there a payback?
MDedge Dermatology
Pregnant women in clinical trials: FDA questions how to include them
MDedge Dermatology
MDedge Daily News: Skin disorders defeat weekend warriors
MDedge Dermatology
MDedge Daily News: Time to let more pregnant women into drug trials?
MDedge Dermatology