|
June 10,
2019
By Seema Verma, Administrator, Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services
When It Comes To Our Health – Every Second Counts
Health care: American’s
favorite debate topic. While there is much to debate, we can all agree
that the patient-provider relationship has been strained by unnecessary
regulations and reporting requirements. Too much regulation has had the
unintentional result of putting the government first and the patient
second. Time spent on adhering to these regulations has decreased the
amount of time clinicians spend with patients.
Our health care system is
big and complex and when you add numerous government regulations on top of
it, the result is that government becomes a barrier to patient empowerment,
innovation and competition. The focus shifts away from patients and on to
micromanaging systems, regulating processes, and reporting. The resulting
complexity has become unwieldy, increased costs, reduced patient
interactions, and contributed to clinician burnout.
We all know that physicians’
training in particular is long, tough and continues throughout their career.
There are very few professions that require this much expertise. Yet, it is
often the case that these highly trained men and women spend more time
checking boxes and filing paperwork than practicing medicine and caring for
patients.
Anyone who has needed
medical assistance can attest to the fact that it wasn’t their insurance or a
government regulation that had the most impact on their health. It was the
medical professional caring for them – the clinician’s skill, dedication,
compassion, and training – and the time spent with the clinician – that
determined the quality of care received. This is why at the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), following the leadership of
the President’s “Cut the Red Tape” initiative, we created the Patients over
Paperwork initiative to eliminate outdated, duplicative, and overly
burdensome regulations so clinicians and providers can focus on their primary
mission: patient care.
And I am very proud of our
progress so far. Over the past two years we made a concerted effort to reduce
clinician and provider burden. We worked across multiple CMS programs
to reduce burden through regulatory changes, documentation simplification, and
policy updates.
According to our latest
information, savings to providers and clinicians are estimated at $5.7
billion and 40 million burden hours through 2021. Estimated savings come from
both final and proposed rules. This includes the elimination of 79 overly
burdensome, redundant, or low-value measures for a projected savings of $128
million and anticipated reduction of 3.3 million burden hours through
2020.
This is a huge
accomplishment, and it was a team effort. Over the last two years, we were able
to identify burdensome regulations by soliciting feedback from the medical
and patient communities through requests for information, listening sessions,
and onsite engagements with front-line clinicians, staff, and patients.
To date, we addressed or are in the process of addressing 83% of the
actionable areas of burden identified through the 2017 RFI. We also heard
from over 2,000 customers across 23 states through interviews, listening
sessions and onsite visits to health care facilities, practices and
beneficiary homes.
Using the information we
gained from our intensive outreach, we made common-sense changes, such as
allowing patient notes written by medical students to count for billing
purposes when the supervising clinician signs off, and allowing clinicians to
focus their notes on what had changed since the last time they saw a patient.
Most recently we made
changes to the Medicare appeals process in an effort to reduce burden and
simplify processes. Specifically we streamlined the appeals process that
Medicare beneficiaries, providers, and suppliers must follow to appeal
denials. We anticipate saving providers approximately 74,000 hours and $3.4
million per year, with most savings coming from removing the requirement that
providers must sign appeal requests. We also finalized a number of technical
corrections to remove outdated and redundant terminology, and adopted
additional changes to further reduce regulatory burden and make it easier for
beneficiaries and providers to navigate the appeals process.
We’ve been working hard to
reduce burden through sub-regulatory changes. We heard that the local
coverage process is an important means to provide decisions on items and
services that benefit Medicare’s beneficiaries but we also heard about a
number of concerns around transparency and notifications. We listened
and, in response to these concerns and to Congress’ requirement in the 21st
Century Cures Act for more transparency in the LCD process, made eleven
updates to modernize and reduce burden related to LCDs. In addition, CMS also
continues to work with providers and clinicians to modernize documentation
requirements and billing codes—which in turn will free up more time for
patients, lessen clinician burnout, and bolster the doctor-patient relationship.
To date we have made 13 documentation changes.
While we’ve made great
strides, our work isn’t done. We continue listening to providers, clinicians,
and patients through our Patients over Paperwork email address: PatientsoverPaperwork@cms.hhs.gov.
Last week we issued The
Request for Information on Reducing Administrative Burden to put Patients
over Paperwork. The RFI invites patients and their families, the medical
community, and other healthcare stakeholders to recommend further changes to
rules, policies, and procedures that would shift more of clinicians’ time and
our healthcare system’s resources from needless paperwork to high-quality
care that improves patient health. Comments are due August 12, 2019 and can
be submitted here: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/06/11/2019-12215/request-for-information-reducing-administrative-burden-to-put-patients-over-paperwork.
We will never stop looking
for ways to make our regulations more streamlined and focused on results,
because when it comes to the health of our patients, every second counts.
###
Get CMS news at cms.gov/newsroom, sign up for CMS news via email and follow CMS on Twitter CMS
Administrator @SeemaCMS, @CMSgov, and @CMSgovPress.
|
To be a Medicare Agent's source of information on topics affecting the agent and their business, and most importantly, their clientele, is the intention of this site. Sourced from various means rooted in the health insurance industry - insurance carriers, governmental agencies, and industry news agencies, this is aimed as a resource of varying viewpoints to spark critical thought and discussion. We welcome your contributions.
Monday, June 10, 2019
When It Comes To Our Health – Every Second Counts
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)


No comments:
Post a Comment