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Mrs. P, 68 years old, was diagnosed with
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's
Disease) five years ago. She now needs a wheelchair, cannot stand
on her own, needs assistance to move from bed to wheelchair, and is
losing the use of her arms and hands. Mrs. P has been receiving home
health care including nursing twice per month, OT twice per month
and daily home health aide services. Despite her need for this care,
Mrs. P's Medicare Advantage plan and home health agency informed her
that Medicare would no longer cover her home care because she is
chronic and "stable in her disease state," and will not improve. She
was informed that she therefore does not need skilled care – a
prerequisite for Medicare home health coverage.
For
decades Medicare beneficiaries, particularly those with long-term,
debilitating conditions and those who need rehabilitation services,
have been denied necessary medical and rehabilitative care based on
an "Improvement Standard." Indeed, this is one of the leading
rationales for unfairly restricting Medicare coverage for
chronically ill people in need of health care and rehabilitative
services.
Mrs.
P's story is based on a real case brought to the Center for Medicare
Advocacy's attention in August, 2008. The situation was so dire
that, when the administrative process failed to reinstate coverage,
the Center filed a complaint in federal district court and obtained
a restraining order requiring that Medicare grant coverage and that
home health care be provided as ordered by Mrs. P's physician.
Similar
denials of coverage and access to health care are encountered
throughout the country by Medicare beneficiaries with other
long-term and chronic conditions, including people enrolled in MA
plans and in traditional Medicare.
The
Improvement Standard Conflicts with the Medicare Act and Regulations
The
"Improvement Standard" is used here as shorthand for coverage
denials issued on the grounds that the individual's condition is
stable, chronic, or not improving, or that the necessary services
are for "maintenance only." This restrictive standard conflicts with
the Medicare Act. Nonetheless, it has become deeply ingrained in the
system, in all care settings, and is ardently followed by those who
make coverage determinations throughout the Medicare decision-making
continuum.
In fact
the Medicare Act and federal regulations support coverage for
maintenance health care and therapy. For example federal
regulations state: "The restoration potential of a patient is not
the deciding factor in determining whether skilled services are
needed. Even if full recovery or medical improvement is not
possible, a patient may need skilled services to prevent further
deterioration or preserve current capabilities…"[i]
In addition, the regulations support coverage if the condition will
improve "OR the skills of a therapist [are] necessary to perform a
safe and effective maintenance program."[ii]
(Emphasis added.) The Medicare Act itself only refers to the need
to improve in order to receive coverage once and that is with regard
to a "malformed body member."[iii]
The
Improvement Standard is Harmful to those Most in Need of Help
The
United States population is aging and living longer with chronic
conditions. Thus the unfair Improvement Standard is affecting more
and more older and disabled people. Most significantly, it keeps
people with debilitating, long-term, and chronic conditions from
receiving the care they need. The people most affected by this
barrier include, but are not limited to, people with Multiple
Sclerosis, Alzheimer's disease, ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease, spinal
cord injuries, diabetes, Parkinson's disease, hypertension,
arthritis and stroke. Further, the erroneous standard
disproportionately affects people who have low-incomes,
African-Americans and Hispanics.
Numerous reports and researchers have confirmed that more people are
living with more chronic conditions:
… almost half of all
Americans live with a chronic condition… Many have multiple chronic
conditions, including functional limitations and disabilities…
people with five or more chronic conditions have an average of
almost 15 physician visits and fill over 50 prescriptions in a year…[iv]
Unfortunately, people with chronic conditions often go without the
care they truly need: Care to maintain their health or retard
deterioration. As the Partnership for Solutions study finds:
People with chronic
conditions are getting services, but those services are not
necessarily in sync with one another, and they are not always the
services needed to maintain health and functioning. … For health
care providers, slowing disease progression should be as important
as treating acute episodes of an illness… Likewise, health insurance
should make standard coverage for these services that help people
maintain their functional status. Many current benefits can be
accessed only if medical improvement is expected.[v]
The
Medicare Improvement Standard is exactly this kind of coverage
barrier, serving as an obstacle to the coverage authorized by the
Medicare Act and to care needed by beneficiaries. Further, the
standard disproportionately affects low-income people and members of
minority groups. Consider, for example:
- 46% of Medicare Beneficiaries have three or more chronic
conditions, 63% have two or more chronic conditions, and 20% of
beneficiaries have five or more chronic conditions.[vi]
- Chronic conditions account for approximately 70% of all
deaths in the United States.
- Most Medicare beneficiaries have very low incomes. 46% of
Medicare beneficiaries have annual incomes less than 200% of the
Federal Poverty Level. 16% of Medicare beneficiaries have
incomes below 100% of the Federal Poverty Level.[vii]
- Older people living in poverty are almost four times as
likely as those living at twice the poverty level to consider
their health as poor.
- Risk factors such as obesity, diabetes, and hypertension are
significantly higher among poor older people than those who are
not poor. Those living in and at risk of poverty get fewer
health screenings and are unable to see a physician because of
the cost.
[viii]
- While these statistics demonstrate the importance of access
to care for all people with chronic conditions, the need is
particularly keen for African Americans, Hispanics, and other
minority and low-income people. Further, while a majority of
Medicare beneficiaries have very limited, fixed incomes, African
American and Hispanic older people are disproportionately poor.
For example, more than two thirds of African American
beneficiaries have incomes below 200% of the federal poverty
level.[ix]
- A study in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA)
reports that, "…vulnerable populations (African Americans, those
living in HPSAs, [Health Professional Shortage Areas] and those
living in poverty areas) were less likely than their
counterparts to receive necessary care and preventive care and
were more likely to have higher rates of avoidable outcomes."[x]
conclusion
As the
Johns Hopkins/Robert Wood Johnson, Partnership for Solutions
study concludes:
… The challenge is to
use our resources to provide people with access to high-quality care
and appropriate services that maintain health and functioning
in the face of [chronic conditions] and disease progression…
(Emphasis added.)
Medicare can begin to meet this challenge by eliminating all use of
the illegal, unfair, and counter-productive Improvement Standard.
Ideally this would be implemented by a clear directive from
President Obama in an Executive Order stating that an ability to
improve shall not be the deciding factor in making any Medicare
coverage determinations. The Executive Order would require a
cleansing of all CMS policies and guidelines that conflict with the
Order, including those that allow coverage denials because the
individual's underlying condition will not improve, or the necessary
services are "maintenance only."
This
action would go a long way toward removing a major barrier to
Medicare coverage and necessary care for older and disabled people
living with chronic conditions. Further, since Medicare standards
often serve as models for private insurance, this action could also
positively affect people with chronic conditions who are insured by
other health insurance.
[ii] 42 CFR
§409.44(c)(2)(iii) (emphasis added)
[iii] Medicare allows coverage when services are
medically "reasonable and necessary for the diagnosis or
treatment of illness or injury or to improve the functioning
of a malformed body member." 42 USC §1395y(a)(1)(A).
[iv] [Chronic
Conditions: Making the Case for Ongoing Care, Introduction,
Partnership for Solutions, a joint project of Johns Hopkins
University and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation,
(September, 2004)]
[vi] [Medicare: A
Primer, Kasier Family Foundation (January 2009); R.
Berenson, MD, J. Horvath, Clinical Characteristics of
Medicare Beneficiaries and Implications for Reform,
www.medicareadvocacy.org/chronic, (2002)].
[vii] [Medicare: A
Primer, Kaiser Family Foundation (January 2009)].
[viii] [Poverty &
Aging in America, AARP (2008)].
[ix] [Medicare: A
Primer Kaiser Family Foundation, (January 2009) and Medicare
Chart Book, 3rd Edition (Summer 2005); Revisiting 'Skin in
the Game' Among Medicare Beneficiaries (February, 2009)].
[x] [284 JAMA 2325,
2330 (11/8/2000)].
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