Friday, April 8, 2016
Medicare
Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS) and Centralized Planning
In a centrally planned economy the allocation
of resources is determined by a comprehensive plan of production which specifies output requirements.
Centralized
Planning Definition
Moving from
volume to value is health reform’s latest mantra, policy makers hope to replace
fee-for-service systems with value-based approaches that reward improved
outcomes achieved at a lower cost.
Ground zero in these efforts is the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule
(MPFS).
Robert Berenson,
MD, and John Goodson, D, “Finding Value
in Unexpected Places – Fixing the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule, “ New England Journal of Medicine, April 7, 2016
The idea behind the Medicare Physician Fee
Schedule(MPFS), is, as far as possible, to end variation of physician payment
rates, standardize fees for specialists
and primary care physicians, narrow the
gap between the two, and improve pay for
cognitive specialists – family physicians,
general internists,
pediatricians, geriatricians, and
psychologists.
There is nothing new about this
effort. MPFS was introduced in
1992. Yet incomes for cardiologists
and radiologists, and other procedural specialists remains 2.0 to 2.5 times
that of cognitive physicians. This should
not be. The Resource-Based Relative
Value Scale (RBRVS), the foundation of MPFS) was designed to align fees with
total physician time on an equitable basis.
Service codes based on Relative Value Units (RVU), especially for
Evaluation and Management Service (E&M) activities, the primary
responsibility of cognitive specialists, was developed to capture the time and effort
physicians spend with patients.
What’s gone wrong?
Well, to begin with, centralized planning
rarely works because it cannot capture the nuances of the patient-physician
encounter. Only markets can to that. Even socialized economies still rely on
fee-for-service, yet spend far less on health care.
Second, as I pointed out in a blog, “Talk
Is Cheap,” the American culture prefers action to talk. This attitude filters
down to how physicians are paid.
Thirdly,
MPFS has failed to adjust fees downward to account for time –less spent
by specialists based on automation, experience, and substitution by non-physicians,
and other productivity improvements. Specialists
now do care faster in less time than previously, but their codes often remain
the same
Fourthly , given an aging population with
chronic illnesses, multiple co-morbidities,
multiple visits to other doctors, and multiple drugs being taken,
cognitive specialists spend more time
than procedural specialists in data gathering and entry, analysis and decision making, and judgment
making in ambiguous and uncertain situations.
Fifthly, CMS coding depends partly on an
AMA-sponsored panel, the RVS Update Committee (RUC), to identify those codes to
improve or reduce to reflect changing realities. Specialty societies dominate RUC and are
reluctant to downgrade codes for specialists.
Sixthly, in the end MPFS may become largely irrelevant.
Many physicians are increasingly not accepting Medicare and Medicaid patients,
and are switching to cash-only and concierge practices to avoid the low fees of
Medicare and Medicaid, often 60% to 80% of fees offered by private
insurance. John Goodman, a conservative
economist, predicts a mass migration from 3rd party coverage, not
only to raise income but to escape the hassles and regulations of 3rd
parties and the time-consuming and overhead expenses of data entry requirements
of electronic heath records. A two-tier
system of care may be emerging to
escape the rigors of centralized planning.
On the surface, centralized planning with replacement of
fee-for-service with a value-based approach may sound good, a noble effort in that it is
implemented to achieve equal outcomes and social justice among members of
society and among physicians, but I am skeptical, given the MPFS performance over the last 24 years, that
quality measurements and value-based outcomes are feasible in a free-enterprise
society.
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