CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 31, 2019
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
Trump Administration Strengthens Medicare by Fostering
Innovation and Modernizing Payment Methodologies to Provide Kidney Patients
with Better Value and Results
Changes will drive innovation in End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) treatment and adopt modern, private sector pricing approaches for Durable Medical Equipment (DME)
Today, the Trump
Administration and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)
finalized changes to the Medicare rules for Durable Medical Equipment
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS), the End-Stage Renal Disease
(ESRD) Prospective Payment System (PPS), and the ESRD Quality Incentive
Program (QIP). These changes support the development and use of innovative
technologies, provide greater access to new treatments in kidney care and
modernize our program integrity methods to better combat waste, fraud and
abuse in the Medicare program. They are also aligned with the goals of
President Trump’s two recent Executive Orders on Advancing American Kidney
Health and Protecting and Improving Medicare for Our Nation’s Seniors.
“For too long, Medicare
beneficiaries suffering from kidney disease have also suffered under outdated
government regulations that stand in the way of the care they need. This
final rule – as well as President Trump’s executive orders issued earlier
this year - signals that those days are waning,” said CMS Administrator Seema
Verma. “We are modernizing payment for durable medical equipment and
advancing innovative solutions to deliver necessary treatment to those with
kidney disease. This rule marks the beginning of a new era for kidney care.”
Currently, there are more
than 430,000 Medicare Fee for-Service beneficiaries with ESRD and they
typically spend 12 hours a week attached to a dialysis machine. Many
beneficiaries with ESRD suffer from poor health outcomes, such as higher
hospitalization and mortality rates, often the result of underlying disease
complications and multiple co-morbidities.
In 2016, Medicare spent
$35.4 billion to cover people with ESRD, representing more than 7.2 percent
in Medicare spending. On average, Medicare spends seven times more on
beneficiaries with ESRD than the average beneficiary. In order to ensure that
ESRD patients receive the best possible care and to maximize how we use taxpayer
dollars, the policies in the final rule will help to better recognize costs
for new therapies under the ESRD PPS that will spur more innovation in kidney
care. Under the rule, certain new and innovative equipment and supplies used
to care for an ESRD patient will qualify for a transitional add-on payment
adjustment. This change will create incentives for ESRD facilities to provide
the innovative therapies that will improve health outcomes.
In this rule, we are
making refinements to payment for new kidney-related drugs. These changes
will better target the payment to innovative new renal dialysis drugs that
will encourage ESRD facility uptake of the latest therapies. These changes
are consistent with the goals outlined in the recent executive order to encourage
innovation for patients.
The rule also will
establish methodologies to modernize the pricing of new Durable Medical
Equipment Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) items and services.
This will provide greater transparency for innovators regarding how CMS
determines if new items and services are comparable to older items and
services for Medicare pricing purposes. The rule also promotes competition
and innovation in DMEPOS by setting Medicare payment for new items based on
commercial pricing data.
Aligned with the goals of
the Patients over Paperwork initiative, CMS is committed to reducing burden
while eliminating potential fraud and abuse. In the final rule, CMS is
simplifying its DMEPOS payment requirements so that practitioners can focus
their attention on caring for Medicare beneficiaries. To help with this
effort, CMS is streamlining the requirements for ordering DMEPOS items and
developing a single list of DMEPOS items potentially subject to payment
requirements. The final rule increases CMS flexibilities, allowing for
quicker action for potential fraud and abuse without increasing provider
burden.
For a fact sheet on the CY
2020 final rule (CMS-1713-F), please visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/cy2020-end-stage-renal-diseasedurable-medical-equipment-final-rule-cms-1713-f
To view the final rule,
please visit: https://www.federalregister.gov/inspection.aspx.
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Administrator @SeemaCMS, @CMSgov, and @CMSgovPress.
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Thursday, October 31, 2019
Trump Administration Strengthens Medicare by Fostering Innovation and Modernizing Payment Methodologies to Provide Kidney Patients with Better Value and Results
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