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Texas doctors opting out of Medicare at alarming rate

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Boanerges
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Texas doctors opting out of Medicare at alarming rate

Texas doctors are opting out of Medicare at alarming rates, frustrated by reimbursement cuts they say make participation in government-funded care of seniors unaffordable.

Two years after a survey found nearly half of Texas doctors weren't taking some new Medicare patients, new data shows 100 to 200 a year are now ending all involvement with the program. Before 2007, the number of doctors opting out averaged less than a handful a year.

“This new data shows the Medicare system is beginning to implode,” said Dr. Susan Bailey, president of the Texas Medical Association. “If Congress doesn't fix Medicare soon, there'll be more and more doctors dropping out and Congress' promise to provide medical care to seniors will be broken.”

More than 300 doctors have dropped the program in the last two years, including 50 in the first three months of 2010, according to data compiled by the Houston Chronicle. Texas Medical Association officials, who conducted the 2008 survey, said the numbers far exceeded their assumptions.

The largest number of doctors opting out comes from primary care, a field already short of practitioners nationally and especially in Texas. Psychiatrists also make up a large share of the pie, causing one Texas leader to say, “God forbid that a senior has dementia.”

The opt-outs follow years of declining Medicare reimbursement that culminated in a looming 21 percent cut in 2010. Congress has voted three times to postpone the cut, which was originally to take effect Jan. 1. It is now set to take effect June 1.
Not cost-effective

The uncertainty proved too much for Dr. Guy Culpepper, a Dallas-area family practice doctor who says he wrestled with his decision for years before opting out in March. It was, he said, the only way “he could stop getting bullied and take control of his practice.”

“You do Medicare for God and country because you lose money on it,” said Culpepper, a graduate of the University of Texas Medical School at Houston. “The only way to provide cost-effective care is outside the Medicare system, a system without constant paperwork and headaches and inadequate reimbursement.”

Ending Medicare participation is just one consequence of the system's funding problems. In a new Texas Medical Association survey, opting out was one of the least common options doctors have taken or are planning as a result of declining Medicare funding — behind increasing fees, reducing staff wages and benefits, reducing charity care and not accepting new Medicare patients.

In 2008, 42 percent of Texas doctors participating in the survey said they were no longer accepting all new Medicare patients. Among primary-care doctors, the percentage was 62 percent.

The impact on doctors has not been lost on their patients. Kathy Sweeney, a Houston retiree, twice has been turned away by specialists because they weren't accepting new Medicare patients. She worries her doctors might have to drop her if Medicare cuts go through and they can't afford to continue in the program.

“I've talked to them about the possibility,” said Sweeney, who sent her legislators a letter calling on them to fix Medicare. “They're hanging in there as long as there's not a severe cut, but just thinking I couldn't continue doctor-patient relationships I built up over years is disturbing. Seniors should be able to see the doctors they want.”

The problem dates back to 1997, when Congress passed a balanced budget law that included a Medicare payment formula aimed at reining in spending. The formula, which assumed low growth rates, called for payment cuts if spending exceeded goals, a scenario that occurred year after year as health care costs grew. The scheduled cuts, expected to be modest, turned out to be large.

Congress would overturn the cuts, but their short-term fixes didn't keep up with inflation. The Texas Medical Association says the cumulative effect since 2001 already amounts to an inflation-adjusted cut of 20.9 percent. In 2001, doctors receiving a $1,000 Medicare payment made roughly $410, after taking out operating expenses. In 2010, they'll net $290. If the scheduled 21.2 percent cut goes through, they'd net $72, effectively an 83 percent cut since 2001.

The issue caused the Texas Medical Association to break ranks with the American Medical Association and oppose health care reform efforts throughout 2009. Then TMA President Dr. William Fleming said “reform is doomed to failure” without Medicare reform and called Congress' failure to devise a rational payment plan “an insult to seniors, people with disabilities and military families.”
No surprise to senator

U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, said he isn't surprised by the new opt-out numbers, allowing that Congress' inability to reform Medicare is leaving “seniors without access and breaking the promise we made to them.”

“The problem has been how to eliminate the cuts without running up the deficit,” said Cornyn, responding to blame U.S. Rep. Gene Green, D-Houston, placed on the Senate for not passing a House bill that would have provided a longer-term Medicare fix. “There hasn't been the political will, but we really have no choice but to fix it.”

Cornyn acknowledged the task is daunting. The Congressional Budget Office recently estimated that eliminating scheduled Medicare payment cuts through 2020 would cost $276 billion.

The growth in Texas Medicare opt-outs began in earnest in 2007, when 70 doctors notified Trailblazer Health Enterprises, the state's Medicare carrier, they would no longer participate, up from seven in 2006. The numbers jumped to 151 in 2008, fell back to 135 in 2009 and are on pace for 200 in 2010. From 1998 to 2002, by contrast, no more than three a year opted out.

Now, according to a Texas Medical Association new poll, more than four in 10 doctors are considering the move.

“I've been in practice 24 years, and a lot of my patients got old right along with me,” Culpepper said. “It's stressful to tell them you're leaving Medicare and they're responsible for payments if they want to stay with you. You feel like you're abandoning them.”
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Another example, just like Wal-Green's, where the government establishing rates without any regard to real market forces. This will always result in practitioners refusing to service these money losing accounts.

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Re: Texas doctors opting out of Medicare at alarming rate

But, But Boaner, Obamacare (aka Romneycare) is going to cut the deficit, insure everyone and hell even bring about world peace!  Zoolander Magnum Steel

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Re: Texas doctors opting out of Medicare at alarming rate

Well, they have already priced themselves out of the market for at leats 45 million people. How much worse could it get? As long as they're making money, the type of customers who come to them is not of their concern. Then, there's that statement about psychiatric care, which makes up a good portion of this contingency. We all know the loose standards that industry runs by. Most of those guys should pay the customer for the experience IMO.

 

Tell me, what would any of you do here to "correct" this situation? I would first of all standardize drug pricing, and utilize the global economy to haelp pay for those research costs that we currently get stuck with. Secondly, I would like to have them justify those $50-$100 charges for a bedpan. Their pricing is based upon models and not actual costs to the customer, which brings up another point, emergency room costs, which these doctors also live with.

 

Bottom line, their own cost structures have led to this. This is simply reactive politics for something else that needs to be cleaned up.

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Re: Texas doctors opting out of Medicare at alarming rate

Now that an actual bil has been sisned people are confirming what I stated all along. Healthcare costs are going to increase with this piece of legislation shit that was passed. It wasn't hard to predict. They did NOTHING to curtail healthcare costs. They put a couple unrealistic cuts in medicare but those will not even last I am sure. People that have insurance now may end up priced out of the market.

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Re: Texas doctors opting out of Medicare at alarming rate

Uhhh, the healthcare industry did nothing as well. That's what led to this mess.

 

And you expected what? I asked for solutions here, and all I got was more propaganda and commentary.

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Re: Texas doctors opting out of Medicare at alarming rate

Mysandrist Fool wrote:

Uhhh, the healthcare industry did nothing as well. That's what led to this mess.

And you expected what? I asked for solutions here, and all I got was more propaganda and commentary.

The reality is the #1 biggest cost is Mal Practice Insurance then second Health Insurance itself.

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Re: Texas doctors opting out of Medicare at alarming rate

Now, that's talking solutions!

 

I'm actually torn a little on the malpractice issue. It has teeth, but all too often fails to get rid of those practitioners that clearly have issues. Making Guinea Pigs out of their patients is not professional behavior. A simple referral to somebody more qualified would work in many instances. And eliminating trainees from the surgery room would be another. My back surgery gone bad in 2000 was the result, I suspect, of a bad doctor allowing one of his understudies to do the honors instead of himself. Nobody would answer that question for me after that surgery, which speaks for itself in my book. Long story short, the lawyer that I wanted to sue with already was representing the man who did that to me. Frustrated Frustrated Frustrated Frustrated

 

That told me all I need to know. Vicodins anybody? Spank Slap!

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Re: Texas doctors opting out of Medicare at alarming rate

 

I was actually responding to Pagan not you.

Your "solution" to standardize drug prices isn't  asolutiopn at all since the OP is about Doctors opting out of Medicare not pharmacies.Attempting to "standardize" pricing is what is causing these doctors to leave the medicare system.

I have plenty of solutions.I have mentioned many before.

  • Start a program where the government pays for a doctor's education (or a large chunk of it) and in turn he has to spend a specified amount of time after graduation working in a clinic for low income persons. After they are finished with their service (2-3 years??) Their education is paid for.
  • A gap exists in healthcare in this country (IMNSHO). I shouldn't have to go to a professional that has 8-10 years of college to tell me that yes my daughter has an ear infection , here is the antibiotic. It just doesn't require that for these simple things. I walked into the Urgent care the other day after I stuck a box cutter in my leg (2 days prior). It was getting a little infection. I walked in the doctor looked at it, said yep you cut yourself, you should have gotten stitches, it's a little infected, here's your anitbiotic. C'mon, surely we can get someone paid a little less than a M.D. to do this. This gap is being filled somewhat by nurse practitioners but they still have to have a doctor within arms reach.
  • The malpractice law needs to be reformed. We ahould have a loser pays system to eliminate some of the frivolous law suits. No monetary awards beyond actual damages, and anyone that brings a lawsuit before the court and wins loses disability from the government.

That's pretty much all I have for now.

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Re: Texas doctors opting out of Medicare at alarming rate

That's good stuff there, Boan. I agree with the education part of it with a possible greater term for the return on investment. And why not? The government should have that same right, should they not? In fact, they could make a profit out of it.

 

The gap listed is also an acknowledgement that better standards are needed, all the way around. And, I agree about frivolous lawsuits, to an extent. What is to define frivolous? Here again, standards could come into play. Let's say that infection turns into something worse because you didn't come in quickly enough. On top of that, you simply play doctor and just want the antibiotics, which don't work, as the infection has spread. Who is to blame there? You, for waiting? The practitioner, for not referring this to a higher level?

This is where it gets sticky...

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Re: Texas doctors opting out of Medicare at alarming rate

Okay here is my solution to the issue.

End insurance programs altogether for health coverage.  Make the individual pay cash and then they might become more responsible for their health care needs.  If the Dr. charges too much then seek out another less costly shop.  End Medicare too.  Make the doctors pay like everyone else, eliminate the malpractice bullshit and in the process fire the lawyers.  Issue everyone a first aid kit for those spur of the moment injuries.

 

Now I was trained to meet the emergency needs of my fellow soldiers and in fact was pretty effective in saving lives with nominal training to start.  If it is good enough for the troops why not the rest of the population.  I was skilled enough to run a a clinic, perform initial physical examinations and form an educated assessment of the problem.  I was taught to perform minor surgery, deliver babies, set broken bones, plug bullet holes and stop bleeding etc. etc.  - all deemed appropriate for military personnel!  So this bullshit about 8-10 years of education to meet basic needs I call bullshit on.

 

The reality is there is no simple solution to any of the health care issues we face.  The best place to start would be the removal of government from the process or limiting them to regulation and licensing only. 

 

We have too fucking many people on this planet now anyway so why be so concerned about extending life into an unnatural time frame?  Why is there such emphasis placed on remaining in this world even past the point of functionality and ability to contribute?  I guess either there is no sense of adventure when it comes to investigating the unknown or crossing over to another reality.  I for one am looking forward to that experience, but then I have a belief system that supports my continuation as a cognitive being.

 

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Re: Texas doctors opting out of Medicare at alarming rate

It's happening with Medicaid now also.

 

http://www.nbcdfw.com/news/health/Doctors-Threaten-to-Pull-Out-of-Texas-Medicaid-98202569.html

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Re: Texas doctors opting out of Medicare at alarming rate

I hear that under the Health Care Reform Act or Obamacare registered voters will be given a choice of K_Y jelley or Vaseline for the screwing you are about to receive.

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