PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Healing cuts for Medicare

The challenge of lowering payments for care following acute hospitalization while safeguarding patient outcomes will require vigilant monitoring

2012-09-05
(Press-News.org) Medicare payment reforms mandated in the Affordable Care Act (ACA) for postacute care have great potential to lower costs without harming patients, a new study reports.

However, researchers caution, policymakers will need to be vigilant to ensure that these cuts don't result in one-time savings that revert to rising costs.

"We expect that the Affordable Care Act's dramatic cuts in payments to providers for postacute care will lead to decreased utilization and lower spending," said David Grabowski, Harvard Medical School professor of health care policy and lead author of the study. "Our work suggests that those changes will not have a dramatic effect on outcomes, based on analysis of patient mortality and hospital readmissions under previous cuts."

These findings are reported in the September issue of Health Affairs.

Each year, more than 10 million Medicare beneficiaries are discharged from acute care hospitals into postacute care settings: long-term care hospitals, inpatient rehabilitation facilities, skilled nursing facilities and patients' homes with services from home health agencies.

"These four sectors were among the fastest growing part of the Medicare program during much of the nineties," Grabowski said. Despite several efforts to curb spending, postacute care remains a major driver of rising Medicare costs.

ACA-mandated changes in payments for Medicare postacute care services are intended to contain spending in the long run and help ensure the program's financial sustainability. In addition to reducing annual payment increases to providers, the act calls for bundled payment models, accountable care organizations and other strategies to promote care coordination and reduce spending.

The researchers studied the effects of payment reforms from 1997, 1998 and 2002. The group also analyzed Medicare claims data to measure the impact of reforms on patient mortality and hospital readmissions for postacute care recipients.

Each of these previous payment reforms caused a steep downtick in postacute care costs immediately after implementation. However, expenses quickly resumed their upward trend as reimbursements were renegotiated and providers changed the ways they managed patient care.

The researchers recommend that policymakers will need to be vigilant in monitoring the impact of the ACA reforms and be prepared to amend policies as necessary to ensure that the reforms exert persistent controls on spending without compromising the delivery of patient-appropriate postacute services.

In the mandated demonstration projects, providers and health care systems are experimenting with different models of payment that all aim to lower costs, for example, providing a lump sum per patient per year, or a single fee for a healthy recovery from an illness or injury to be shared among physicians, hospitals and postacute care facilities.

"If it works the way it's meant to, patients will use only those services that are the most efficient," Grabowski said. That could mean moving patients from high-cost skilled inpatient rehabilitation facilities to lower-cost skilled nursing facilities. It could also mean that providers find creative new ways to avoid costly treatments altogether, like inspecting homes for tripping hazards to prevent painful and costly falls. In the current system, there's no incentive for providers to perform these kinds of interventions, he said, since Medicare has no mechanism to reward these kinds of savings.

"The overall goal of these experiments is to find ways to improve overall care and make services more cost effective. In any system this complex, there are always going to be tradeoffs, so monitoring results closely to minimize any issues will be critical," Grabowski said.

INFORMATION:

Collaborators for this study included Joseph Newhouse, the John D. MacArthur Professor of Health Policy and Management at Harvard University and professor of health care policy, HMS, Peter J. Huckfeldt at the RAND Corporation, Neeraj Sood at the University of Southern California, and José Escarce at the David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles, and RAND.

This research was supported by a grant from the National Institute on Aging and a grant from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

Joseph Newhouse is a director of, and holds equity in, Aetna, which sells Medicare Advantage plans.

Citation

Health Affairs, Sept. 4, 2012

"Medicare Postacute Care Payment Reforms Have Potential To Improve Efficiency Of Care, But May Need Changes To Cut Costs" by Grabowski et al.

Harvard Medical School has more than 7,500 full-time faculty working in 11 academic departments located at the School's Boston campus or in one of 47 hospital-based clinical departments at 16 Harvard-affiliated teaching hospitals and research institutes. Those affiliates include Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Cambridge Health Alliance, Children's Hospital Boston, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, Hebrew SeniorLife, Joslin Diabetes Center, Judge Baker Children's Center, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Massachusetts General Hospital, McLean Hospital, Mount Auburn Hospital, Schepens Eye Research Institute, Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, and VA Boston Healthcare System.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

National survey of economists uncovers vast gender gap in policy views

2012-09-05
Is there a "gender gap" in the views of professional economists? A new national study finds that while most economists agree on core economic concepts, values and methods, they differ along gender lines in their views on important economic policy. The study – believed to be the first systematic analysis of male and female economists' views on a wide variety of policy issues – surveyed hundreds of members of the American Economic Association. The research team found that despite having similar training and adherence to core economic principles and methodology, male and ...

Birth of a planet

2012-09-05
The Earth and the planets of our solar system are not alone in the universe. Over the past few decades, the hunt for extrasolar planets has yielded incredible discoveries, and now planetary researchers have a new tool—simulated models of how planets are born. Most planets form when a molecular cloud collapses into a young star. The leftover gas and dust form a disk around the star, and the particulates inside the disk begin to collide and coalesce over millions of years, forming larger and larger objects until a planet eventually takes shape. Sally Dodson Robinson, ...

Magazines jeopardize and empower young women's sexuality

2012-09-05
Los Angeles, CA (September 4, 2012) While the effects of sexualized media on young women has long been debated, a new study finds that women who read sex-related magazine articles from popular women's magazines like Cosmopolitan are less likely to view premarital sex as a risky behavior. Additionally, the women who are exposed to these articles are more supportive of sexual behavior that both empowers women and prioritizes their own sexual pleasure. This study was published in a recent article from Psychology of Women Quarterly (published by SAGE). Study authors Janna ...

Gardener's delight offers glimpse into the evolution of flowering plants

Gardeners delight offers glimpse into the evolution of flowering plants
2012-09-05
The Pink Double Dandy peony, the Double Peppermint petunia, the Doubled Strawberry Vanilla lily and nearly all roses are varieties cultivated for their double flowers. The blossoms of these and other such plants are lush with extra petals in place of the parts of the flower needed for sexual reproduction and seed production, meaning double flowers – though beautiful – are mutants and usually sterile. The genetic interruption that causes that mutation helped scientists in the 1990s pinpoint the genes responsible for normal development of sexual organs stamens and carpels ...

Pretreatment PET/CT imaging of lymph nodes predicts recurrence in breast cancer patients

2012-09-05
Disease-free survival for invasive ductal breast cancer (IDC) patients may be easier to predict with the help of F-18-fludeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) scans, according to research published in the September issue of The Journal of Nuclear Medicine. New data show that high maximum standard uptake value (SUVmax) of F-18-FDG in the lymph nodes prior to treatment could be an independent indicator of disease recurrence. "Many studies have revealed that breast cancer patients with axillary lymph node metastasis have a significantly ...

Realizing the promise of RNA nanotechnology for new drug development

Realizing the promise of RNA nanotechnology for new drug development
2012-09-05
New Rochelle, NY, September 4, 2012—The use of RNA in nanotechnology applications is highly promising for many applications, including the development of new therapeutic compounds. Key technical challenges remain, though, and the challenges and opportunities associated with the use of RNA molecules in nanotechnology approaches are presented in a review article in Nucleic Acid Therapeutics, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. The article is available free online at the Nucleic Acid Therapeutics website. Peixuan Guo and colleagues, University of Kentucky, ...

Waste not, power up

Waste not, power up
2012-09-05
HOUSTON – (Sept. 4, 2012) – Researchers at Rice University and the Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium, have developed a way to make flexible components for rechargeable lithium-ion (LI) batteries from discarded silicon. The Rice lab of materials scientist Pulickel Ajayan created forests of nanowires from high-value but hard-to-recycle silicon. Silicon absorbs 10 times more lithium than the carbon commonly used in LI batteries, but because it expands and contracts as it charges and discharges, it breaks down quickly. The Ajayan lab reports this week in the journal ...

UCF researchers record world record laser pulse

UCF researchers record world record laser pulse
2012-09-05
A University of Central Florida research team has created the world's shortest laser pulse and in the process may have given scientists a new tool to watch quantum mechanics in action – something that has been hidden from view until now. UCF Professor Zenghu Chang from the Department of Physics and the College of Optics and Photonics, led the effort that generated a 67-attosecond pulse of extreme ultraviolet light. The results of his research are published online under Early Posting in the journal Optics Letters. An attosecond is an incomprehensible quintillionith ...

Human impact felt on Black Sea long before industrial era

Human impact felt on Black Sea long before industrial era
2012-09-05
When WHOI geologist Liviu Giosan first reconstructed the history of how the Danube River built its delta, he was presented with a puzzle. In the delta's early stages of development, the river deposited its sediment within a protected bay. As the delta expanded onto the Black Sea shelf in the late Holocene and was exposed to greater waves and currents, rather than seeing the decline in sediment storage that he expected, Giosan found the opposite. The delta continued to grow. In fact, it has tripled its storage rate. If an increase in river runoff was responsible for ...

U of M faculty find antimicrobials altering intestinal bacteria composition in swine

2012-09-05
MINNEAPOLIS/ST. PAUL (09/04/2012) — Researchers from the University of Minnesota's College of Veterinary Medicine, concerned about the use of antibiotics in animal production, have found that antimicrobial growth promoters administered to swine can alter the kind of bacteria present in the animal's intestinal track, resulting in an accelerated rate of growth and development in the animals. Antibiotics are routinely administered to swine to treat illness and to promote larger, leaner animals. The results of the study, conducted by Richard Isaacson, Ph.D., microbiologist ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New discovery could lower heart attack and stroke risk for people with type 2 diabetes

Tumor electrophysiology in precision tumor therapy

AI revolution in medicine: how large language models are transforming drug development

Hidden contamination in DNA extraction kits threatens accuracy of global zoonotic surveillance

Slicing and dictionaries: a new approach to medical big data

60 percent of the world’s land area is in a precarious state

Thousands of kids in mental health crisis are stuck for days in hospital emergency rooms, study finds

Prices and affordability of essential medicines in 72 low-, middle-, and high-income markets

Space mice babies

FastUKB: A revolutionary tool for simplifying UK Biobank data analysis

Mount Sinai returns as official hospital and medical services provider of the US Open Tennis Championships

NIH grant funds effort to target the root of HIV persistence

Intrinsic HOTI-type topological hinge states in photonic metamaterials

Breakthrough lung cancer therapy targets tumors with precision nanobody

How AI could speed the development of RNA vaccines and other RNA therapies

Scientists reveal how senses work together in the brain

Antarctica’s changing threat landscape underscores the need for coordinated action

Intergalactic experiment: Researchers hunt for mysterious dark matter particle with clever new trick

Using bacteria to sneak viruses into tumors

Large community heart health checks can identify risk for heart disease

Past Arctic climate secrets to be revealed during i2B “Into The Blue” Arctic Ocean Expedition 2025

Teaching the immune system a new trick could one day level the organ transplant playing field

Can green technologies resolve the “dilemma” in wheat production?

Green high-yield and high-efficiency technology: a new path balancing yield and ecology

How can science and technology solve the problem of increasing grain yield per unit area?

New CRISPR technique could rewrite future of genetic disease treatment

he new tech that could improve care for Parkinson's patients

Sharing is power: do the neighbourly thing when it comes to solar

Sparring saigas win 2025 BMC journals Image Competition

Researchers discover dementia-like behaviour in pre-cancer cells

[Press-News.org] Healing cuts for Medicare
The challenge of lowering payments for care following acute hospitalization while safeguarding patient outcomes will require vigilant monitoring