Medicare Cuts May Cause Layoffs
The impending 9.9% cut in the Medicare physician fee schedule is likely to result in staff and infrastructure cutbacks by medical group practices, according to a poll taken by the Medical Group Management Association. Of 613 group practice leaders who responded, more than 41% said they expected that their practices would limit the number of Medicare patients treated, and 19% said they would refuse to accept any new Medicare patients. In addition, almost 45% said they would reduce the number of administrative staff employed by their practice, and 33% said they would reduce the number of clinical staff. Respondents said compensation for both staff and physicians also would probably suffer, with 22% eyeing reduced staff salaries and 57% reducing staff benefits; 59% reported they would likely lower physician pay. Reducing funds for information technology and facilities was favored by 53% and 59% of respondents, respectively. “Unfortunately, it's the patients and employees who staff these facilities that bear the burden of the financial belt-tightening in group practice,” Dr. William Jessee, president and CEO of MGMA, said in a statement.
Partisan Views on Health Reform
While 82% of Democrats agreed that “it is the government's duty to ensure that all Americans have adequate health care coverage,” only 47% of Republicans agreed with that statement, according to a WSJ.com/Harris Interactive online survey of 2,185 adults. And 59% of Republicans think the health care system could be improved by giving tax breaks to those who buy private health insurance, vs. 41% of Democrats, according to the September survey. More Democrats (37%) than Republicans (21%) think the most important issue is providing coverage for the uninsured, and more Republicans (33%) than Democrats (23%) put slowing costs at the top of their list. The survey also showed that more Americans believe the Democratic party can do a good job of reforming the health care system, but that trust is eroding, down to 39% in September 2007 from 50% in February 2007. In the current survey, only 26% trusted the Republican party to reform health care, down from 28% in February. Most Democrats (70%) think that of the current front-running presidential candidates, Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) is the most likely to be able to improve the health care system; Republicans (48%) think that former New York City mayor Rudolph Guiliani can do the job.
Social Programs Eat Federal Funds
Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid combined take up almost half of the federal government's nondefense, nonintelligence spending in 2005, according to the latest edition of the Census Bureau's Consolidated Federal Funds Report, which details government spending at the state and county level. Of the $2.3 trillion spent that year on direct expenditures, grants, contracts, loans, disability, insurance, and salaries and wages, almost $1.1 trillion went to the entitlement programs, with Social Security spending around $568 billion, Medicare around $336 billion, and Medicaid around $192 billion. Total spending was 6% higher than in 2004. Per capita federal spending was highest in Alaska, Virginia, and Maryland. The report can be accessed at
Put Health Records in the Vault
Microsoft has launched HealthVault, a Web site where consumers can post and maintain their personal health records. Individuals can input their health and medical data on the free site and give permission for their health care providers to access it. The site can accept scanned copies of faxed and paper records, as well as images such as x-rays and CT scans sent by health care providers. HealthVault also allows users to find health information on the Internet and keep it for future reference. Although use of the site is free for consumers, the company will sell sponsored links and advertisements. In response to privacy concerns, Dr. Deborah Peel of the Patient Privacy Rights Foundation, who advised Microsoft on privacy protections, said in a statement that individuals' “personal health information will not be data-mined, because they alone control it.” Microsoft is also working with organizations including the American Heart Association, Johnson & Johnson, and the Mayo Clinic to build consumer-targeted Web services compatible with their HealthVault platform.
Medicare Plans Resume Marketing
All seven of the private fee-for-service Medicare plans that voluntarily suspended marketing last summer (INTERNAL MEDICINE NEWS, Sept. 1, p. 50) have been found to be compliant with Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services requirements and may resume marketing activities for the 2008 benefit year, the agency announced. CMS officials expressed concern over the summer that insurance brokers and agents were engaging in deceptive practices, such as telling beneficiaries that private fee-for-service plans are accepted by all Medicare providers. A comprehensive review of the plans conducted by CMS has verified that “vast improvements to their internal controls and oversight processes” have been made. The agency also announced that it has beefed up its oversight procedures, including requiring specific disclaimer language in enrollee materials. “We believe the new requirements and compliance plans build a system that is designed to prevent marketing violations,” CMS Acting Administrator Kerry Weems said in a statement. The seven plans are UnitedHealth Group, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Tennessee, Humana, Sterling, WellCare, Coventry, and Universal American Financial Corp.