As reported
Friday in News Now, the New York and New Jersey chapters
have set up relief funds for the physical therapy community affected by Hurricane
Sandy, with APTA matching contributions up to $5,000. The New York
Chapter's donation page now is live on the chapter's
website. The New Jersey Chapter's donation page can be found at the chapter's website.
Physical
therapists (PTs) sometimes find that the restrictions placed on their services
by third-party payers interfere with their ability to help patients reach their
goals. Additionally, the cost of collecting payment from third-party payers and
the difficulties in negotiating rates with insurance companies may undermine
the financial viability of a PT practice. For these reasons, some physical
therapists are choosing an out-of-network, or cash-based, model for their
practices. New resources at www.apta.org/Payment/Billing/CashPractice/ can help PTs understand the
various types of cash-based practice models, the importance of complying with
laws and regulations, and pros and cons of practicing as an out-of-network
provider.
Related
to the solicitation of public comments regarding Medicare's policy to rebill
for subsequently denied inpatient Part A stays under the Medicare Part B
outpatient hospital benefit (see News
Now article), the American Hospital Association
along with a number of hospitals across the country filed a lawsuit in US District Court (The American Hospital Association, et al. v.
Kathleen Sebelius, Case No. 1:12-cv-1770)
on November 1. In the lawsuit, the plaintiffs contend that the Medicare payment
denial policy is "arbitrary and capricious" as it unfairly denies
payment to hospitals for medically necessary services that are not statutorily
excluded under Medicare Part B. Therefore, the plaintiffs request that the
court grant a declaratory judgment affirming that the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services' (CMS) payment denial policy is invalid and that CMS has
failed to promulgate a regulatory rationale for the application of this
arbitrary policy. In addition, the plaintiffs request that the court direct CMS
to pay the plaintiffs accordingly for the denied services under the Medicare
Part B benefit.
In its comments to CMS submitted September 4,
APTA urged the agency to consider the effect that payment for inpatient
hospital services under Medicare Part B might have on the therapy cap for
outpatient therapy services. Due to risk of denials when classifying patients
for an inpatient stay, APTA explains, there are instances in which a patient's
entire stay in the hospitals, sometimes spanning as much 16 days, is classified
as an outpatient hospital stay. Therefore, all physical therapy services
received during this period as of October 1, 2012, will count toward the
therapy cap. "We believe that this is unfair to these patients as it may
limit their access to physical therapy in the outpatient setting, when in fact
these services should have been billed as inpatient services," says
APTA.
Care
coordination literature for people with disabilities is relatively new and
focuses on initial implementation of interventions rather than assessing the
quality of the implementation, says a new review
commissioned by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ). The
review is part of a series that provides a critical analysis of existing
literature on quality improvement strategies and issues for topics identified
by the 2003 Institute of Medicine report Priority Areas for National Action:
Transforming Health Care Quality. As part of its charge to continuously assess
progress toward quality and to update the list of priority areas, AHRQ
identified people with disabilities as a priority population.
For this review, the authors included all forms of disability except severe
and persistent mental illness for all age groups in outpatient and community
settings. They focused on outcomes, patient experience, and care coordination
process measures. They searched for generic outcome measures rather than
disability/condition-specific measures. They also looked for examples of
outcomes used in the context of disability as a complicating condition for a
set of basic service needs relevant to the general population, and secondary
conditions common to disability populations.
Of 15,513 articles screened, 15 articles were included for general outcome
measures and 44 studies for care coordination.
Overall, the reviewfound very few direct examples of work conducted from the
perspective of disability as a complicating condition. "Capturing the
disability perspective will require collaboration and coordination of
measurement efforts across medical interventions, rehabilitation, and social
support provision," the authors write.
A new
interactive map from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) illustrates the
prevalence of diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and asthma in adults from 2001
to 2010. Users can breakdown the statistics by educational attainment and
race/ethnicity. The map is part of RWJF's
Prevention Saves Lives and Money webpage, which includes studies that highlight
prevention initiatives that are effective in improving health and reducing
health care costs, in addition to case studies that examine innovative public
health initiatives that enhance workplace wellness.
In this month's Craikcast
Editor in Chief Rebecca Craik, PT, PhD,
FAPTA, summarizes the articles in PTJ’s last standard issue for 2012; December is a special issue focusing on critical care. Topics in
November's issue include exercise training, extracorporeal shock-wave therapy,
health behaviors and role-modeling attitudes of physical therapists and
physical therapist students, and falls risk assessment.