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Dear Mr President, Medicare Stinks

by Rob on February 3, 2009 · Comments

in Best Of, Rants

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Dear Mr. President:

The physicians and management in our office had a discussion this morning about the upcoming audits physicians are facing from CMS. I had to wait for my blood pressure to get out of dangerous range to write this letter.  The frustration, fear, and powerlessness I felt made me really question whether it is worth continuing to see my Medicare patients.

I am a primary care physician and that about 20% of my patients are covered by Medicare.  As a whole, they are wonderful people, but difficult patients.  The elderly are truly a delight to talk to, learn from, and care for; I consider it an honor to be their doctor.  But the complexity of a person’s medical problems goes up exponentially as they near the end of their life.  This means that I spend more time per patient for my Medicare population – which is OK if I can be paid for my extra time and effort.

But here is the message we physicians are being given:

  1. Medicare auditors will be knocking at our doors, and if there are “problems” with our charting we will be told to send money back to CMS for our whole Medicare population.  We are obligated to prove that we did not defraud Medicare to reclaim the money for the work we did.  This is, obviously, consistent with the cornerstone of the American legal system, “A person is presumed guilty unless they can prove that they are innocent.”
  2. The “problems” they are looking for are inconsistencies in the charting and the billing we do.  These “inconsistencies” are not just egregious attempts at stealing money from Medicare, they are little things like this:
    1. The failure to mention the EKG we ordered in the note (even if it is right there in the chart).
    2. The appearance that we are using a “cookie-cutter template” to do our notes – i.e. if all of our physical exams, review of systems, or impressions look similar, then it will be assumed we are trying to defraud Medicare.
    3. Forgetting to document a discussion of the patient about a diabetic eye exam.
  3. Certain ICD-9 codes will be accepted by Medicare, but will be “flags” that we are possibly trying to cheat Medicare out of money.  Diagnoses like Hypertension ICD-401.9 and Diabetes Type 2 ICD-250.00 will be flags.  We need to be more specific in our coding to avoid immediate suspicion.

While my information may not be 100% accurate, the fear in the medical community is.  We practice very good medicine in our practice and probably save money for the system (as studies have shown that a higher percentage of primary care in a community means lower cost – ask the Brits on this one).  We use an EMR and are very tuned in to the quality of our care (NCQA recognized for our diabetes care).  I strongly suspect that our quality of care and documentation are in the top 10%.  Yet we are fearful that your government employees are going to use us as scape goats for the out-of-control costs of Medicare and put us out of business in the process.

We see what is being done to the hospitals with the “No Pay” diagnoses.  That whole debacle is irrational and unfair, but the hospitals have no recourse.  That makes us extremely pessimistic about our odds when facing the hit-men from CMS.  If a hospital with its lawyers and other resources can be hung out to dry, what chance does a PCP have?

So at an increasing rate, we are discussing the option of dropping Medicare altogether.  That really is an amazing thing, as we have always played by the rules and have seen our care for the elderly as a responsibility and civic duty we have.  We have never considered our acceptance of Medicare as something that actually makes business sense – we just want to and like to care for the patients.  But the increasing hostility we are seeing from the witch-hunters with their torches and angry mobs is making us really consider whether we can afford to stay on board.

The practice of medicine would be far simpler for us if we dropped Medicare and Medicaid – and probably more profitable.  But I don’t want to.  I love my patients and want to continue to have the honor of being their doctor.  Please don’t convince me that it is not worth the effort.  Please don’t hurt our elderly in such a way.  Please don’t let the CMS cronies make it look like we physicians are the root of the problem.  We may not be totally innocent; but most of us are doing the best we can in a system that is becoming increasingly hostile and incredibly burdensome.

On behalf of all scared physicians out there,

Dr. Rob.

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  • A quiet "amen" from the patient corner. We don' t want to lose the Dr. Rob's in our country.
  • Roy
    Twittered: @doc_rob Good Medicare posts. MC is going down tubes fast with RAC. Feel bad for older pts. See Shrink Rap post on the beginning of the middle of the end of Medicare.

    Patients with Medicare need to let their representatives in Congress know that the squeeze on docs may win the Medicare budget battle but lose the war ... and their doctors!
  • Dr. Rob,
    You are going to send these letters, aren't you? I think it would make good reading for all politicians.
  • You should send this out! Even submit to CNN, etc.

    btw...I couldn't find where you wee in CNN blogging section. ?

    It will be a sad day if elderly patients lose their trusted doctors and possibly have no one to see because they won't be able to pay for a visit on their own.

    I would be devastated if I lost my urologist or pcp and I am not elderly. They have had their docs for years and would feel so lost.

    And you wouldn't have gotten to know that lovely elderly lady that you wrote about visiting.

    I hope it works out for you and other docs... and patients.

    How different is MDCR now from when you 1st began your practice?
  • Ken O
    Ref Para 3 "While my...the process." I'll take that as being asked, and confirm the cost/benefit budget analysis argument stated!

    Serious question about bullet point (1) though. I thought your legal system was based on ours, in which case there is a presumption of innocence in court, but of guilt when dealing with government auditors. ;)
  • News like that makes me very glad I am not in practice any longer.News like that makes me very worried that the physicians who will be taking care of me have to put up with that type nonsense and worse.
  • Medicare is a huge nuisance as far as I'm concerned, and I'm only in medical records! The craziness of the things that have to be documented is enough to make the sanest person question their motives...like "Big Brother" thinks everybody's out to defraud the system. I'm sure you understand to a degree what a headache it can be for everybody when you (as the HIM person) have to keep hounding certain providers to give the required documentation to maintain their "levels" appropriately...and it seems to just keep getting more and more convoluted as time passes. They need to scrap the entire setup and start over with just a few core ideas instead of making it so complicated that you risk fraud every time something is or isn't documented. Yes, indeed...Medicare stinks! (And it's killing our primary care system as sure as anything, which is sad all the way around.)
  • Mr. President, Please Don’t Take My Medicare Insurance Away


    Just because I’m a Senior Citizen doesn’t mean you should write me off in favor of a younger generation who never worked for the benefits you are trying to transfer from me to them.

    If I need a hip operation, please don’t deny me because I’m old and going to die anyway.

    If I need a knee replacement, please don’t tell me with the time I have left I can limp around or use a cane or a wheel chair.

    Who are you and your Congressmen henchmen to decide when I do or don’t need an MRI that might detect a problem that could save my life?

    What happened to us all getting insurance that is as good as the health insurance that members of Congress have?

    Why are you trying to take our benefits away?

    Why are you trying to make it unprofitable for our doctors to give us the care we need?

    Why are you doing this to us?

    Do you think we’re disposable?

    Do you think we won’t notice what you’re doing?

    Do you think we don’t care?

    Do you think we don’t vote?
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