News

CMS Expands Coverage for Cardiac Rehabilitation


 

MIAMI — Private insurers are likely to follow the lead set by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and expand coverage for cardiac rehabilitation services, according to a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine.

“In March 2006, Medicare made a big shift for cardiac rehab,” the first major coverage change in decades, Steven Keteyian, Ph.D., said. Since the 1980s, Medicare has covered cardiac rehabilitation for patients following a heart attack, coronary artery bypass surgery, or angina.

The expanded coverage includes heart valve repair or replacement, percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) or coronary stenting, and heart or combined heart-lung transplantation. These CMS changes are important because private insurers usually follow suit, said Dr. Keteyian, director of Preventive Cardiology at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit.

“Missing for me is the heart failure patient,” Dr. Keteyian said. “They are awaiting further evidence.” Data are insufficient regarding benefits of cardiac rehabilitation in patients with heart failure, although studies are underway that might provide some answers, according to a CMS news release.

Previously, CMS reimbursed only the exercise component of cardiac rehabilitation. Now coverage also includes medical evaluation, risk factor modification, exercise, and education.

Historically, duration of rehabilitation was limited to 36 visits in 12 weeks. Now physicians have up to 18 weeks to complete the same number of visits, Dr. Keteyian said. “For us, having access to these patients for 4–6 months is very helpful. This will give us a lot of flexibility in how we manage these patients.” In addition, following a review and approval, rehabilitation can be extended up to 72 visits over 36 weeks.

ECG rhythm strips were mandatory for reimbursement prior to the policy change. Now the need for such monitoring is at the discretion of the physician.

Previously, requirements for physician supervision of cardiac rehabilitation patients were unclear, Dr. Keteyian said. CMS only stipulated that physicians were proximal to the exercise area. More specific requirements now state that physicians are expected to be on hospital premises or within 250 yards if the area is in a separate building on the hospital campus. They must be immediately available if the cardiac rehabilitation unit is freestanding, Dr. Keteyian said.

CMS originally proposed identifying the “incident to” physician as the ordering physician only. However, the agency ultimately decided it would not be appropriate to have “incident to” rules specific for cardiac rehabilitation.

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