User login
Radiation oncologists say they could be forced to shut their doors or consolidate their practices, if the proposed cuts to radiation therapy in the 2013 Medicare physician fee schedule are allowed to stay in place.
And this is likely to hasten a shift of services out of the community and into the hospital, according to officials at the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO), which surveyed its membership in the wake of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ proposed rule in early July.
"Some patients will likely receive their care in radiation therapy centers at a far greater distance from their home in both hospital-based facilities and larger freestanding centers that survive these cuts," said Dr. Michael L. Steinberg, president of the ASTRO’s board of directors, in an interview.
With the closure of radiation therapy centers, physicians would seek employment in surviving freestanding or hospital-based facilities, he added,
The CMS is proposing a 15% reduction in payment for IMRT (Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy) and SBRT (Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy). The agency also proposed a 19% cut for community-based radiation therapy centers.
IMRT and SBRT account for about a third of Medicare spending on radiation therapy, according to a spokeswoman for the ASTRO. Medicare and Medicaid are the predominant payers for radiation therapy, which is delivered to two-thirds of the nation’s 1.5 million cancer patients annually.
The ASTRO survey, which was conducted online, received about 600 responses. (There are about 4,500 radiation oncologists in the United States.) Of the 599 who participated, almost 60% were from community practices or combined community- and hospital-based practices. The results reported were only for that 60%.
Physicians were not asked about the impact of the almost-29% overall cut in physician pay called for by Medicare’s Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) formula.
If just the close-to-20% cut for radiation therapy centers goes into effect, 35% of practices said they would probably have to close their doors, and 64% said they would consolidate. Both actions would lead to longer wait times for treatment, said ASTRO CEO Laura Thevenot in a briefing with reporters.
The consequences may also mean that physicians will spend less time with patients – that is, with those patients who would still be able to access a radiation oncologist. Some 70% of respondents said they would limit Medicare patients if the cuts go through, and 49% said they would stop accepting Medicare patients altogether.
Radiation oncologists also said they would cut back on purchases of new technology and lay off support staff and other nonphysician employees.
"The likely end result for limited access to radiation therapy – an integral form of care used in nearly 70% of all cancer patients – would be an erosion in the gains in cure rates, quality of life, and other clinical outcomes that have been achieved in our country over the last 20 years," said Dr. Constantine A. Mantz, a radiation oncologist in Ft. Myers, Fla., during the press briefing.
Ms. Thevenot said that the CMS had used faulty information to calculate the true costs of IMRT and SBRT, and that the agency should revisit the codes for both procedures.
Added Dr. Steinberg in a statement, "ASTRO welcomes a comprehensive review of these procedure codes and supports the necessary sophistication of a process, such as provided by the [American Medical Association’s Relative Value Scale Update Committee (RUC)], to value complex medical procedures including IMRT and SBRT." He is also professor and chairman of radiation oncology at the University of California, Los Angeles.
According to Ms. Thevenot, IMRT was reviewed by AMA’s RUC in fall 2010, and SBRT was reviewed in February 2011.
The ASTRO has also enlisted the support of Congress to overturn the cuts. Representatives Joe Pitts (R-Penn.) and Frank Pallone (D-N.J.), along with Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.), have been circulating a letter decrying the cuts that will eventually be sent to officials at the CMS. The organization says that a "similar bipartisan letter is being drafted in the Senate."
Radiation oncologists say they could be forced to shut their doors or consolidate their practices, if the proposed cuts to radiation therapy in the 2013 Medicare physician fee schedule are allowed to stay in place.
And this is likely to hasten a shift of services out of the community and into the hospital, according to officials at the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO), which surveyed its membership in the wake of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ proposed rule in early July.
"Some patients will likely receive their care in radiation therapy centers at a far greater distance from their home in both hospital-based facilities and larger freestanding centers that survive these cuts," said Dr. Michael L. Steinberg, president of the ASTRO’s board of directors, in an interview.
With the closure of radiation therapy centers, physicians would seek employment in surviving freestanding or hospital-based facilities, he added,
The CMS is proposing a 15% reduction in payment for IMRT (Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy) and SBRT (Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy). The agency also proposed a 19% cut for community-based radiation therapy centers.
IMRT and SBRT account for about a third of Medicare spending on radiation therapy, according to a spokeswoman for the ASTRO. Medicare and Medicaid are the predominant payers for radiation therapy, which is delivered to two-thirds of the nation’s 1.5 million cancer patients annually.
The ASTRO survey, which was conducted online, received about 600 responses. (There are about 4,500 radiation oncologists in the United States.) Of the 599 who participated, almost 60% were from community practices or combined community- and hospital-based practices. The results reported were only for that 60%.
Physicians were not asked about the impact of the almost-29% overall cut in physician pay called for by Medicare’s Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) formula.
If just the close-to-20% cut for radiation therapy centers goes into effect, 35% of practices said they would probably have to close their doors, and 64% said they would consolidate. Both actions would lead to longer wait times for treatment, said ASTRO CEO Laura Thevenot in a briefing with reporters.
The consequences may also mean that physicians will spend less time with patients – that is, with those patients who would still be able to access a radiation oncologist. Some 70% of respondents said they would limit Medicare patients if the cuts go through, and 49% said they would stop accepting Medicare patients altogether.
Radiation oncologists also said they would cut back on purchases of new technology and lay off support staff and other nonphysician employees.
"The likely end result for limited access to radiation therapy – an integral form of care used in nearly 70% of all cancer patients – would be an erosion in the gains in cure rates, quality of life, and other clinical outcomes that have been achieved in our country over the last 20 years," said Dr. Constantine A. Mantz, a radiation oncologist in Ft. Myers, Fla., during the press briefing.
Ms. Thevenot said that the CMS had used faulty information to calculate the true costs of IMRT and SBRT, and that the agency should revisit the codes for both procedures.
Added Dr. Steinberg in a statement, "ASTRO welcomes a comprehensive review of these procedure codes and supports the necessary sophistication of a process, such as provided by the [American Medical Association’s Relative Value Scale Update Committee (RUC)], to value complex medical procedures including IMRT and SBRT." He is also professor and chairman of radiation oncology at the University of California, Los Angeles.
According to Ms. Thevenot, IMRT was reviewed by AMA’s RUC in fall 2010, and SBRT was reviewed in February 2011.
The ASTRO has also enlisted the support of Congress to overturn the cuts. Representatives Joe Pitts (R-Penn.) and Frank Pallone (D-N.J.), along with Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.), have been circulating a letter decrying the cuts that will eventually be sent to officials at the CMS. The organization says that a "similar bipartisan letter is being drafted in the Senate."
Radiation oncologists say they could be forced to shut their doors or consolidate their practices, if the proposed cuts to radiation therapy in the 2013 Medicare physician fee schedule are allowed to stay in place.
And this is likely to hasten a shift of services out of the community and into the hospital, according to officials at the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO), which surveyed its membership in the wake of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ proposed rule in early July.
"Some patients will likely receive their care in radiation therapy centers at a far greater distance from their home in both hospital-based facilities and larger freestanding centers that survive these cuts," said Dr. Michael L. Steinberg, president of the ASTRO’s board of directors, in an interview.
With the closure of radiation therapy centers, physicians would seek employment in surviving freestanding or hospital-based facilities, he added,
The CMS is proposing a 15% reduction in payment for IMRT (Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy) and SBRT (Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy). The agency also proposed a 19% cut for community-based radiation therapy centers.
IMRT and SBRT account for about a third of Medicare spending on radiation therapy, according to a spokeswoman for the ASTRO. Medicare and Medicaid are the predominant payers for radiation therapy, which is delivered to two-thirds of the nation’s 1.5 million cancer patients annually.
The ASTRO survey, which was conducted online, received about 600 responses. (There are about 4,500 radiation oncologists in the United States.) Of the 599 who participated, almost 60% were from community practices or combined community- and hospital-based practices. The results reported were only for that 60%.
Physicians were not asked about the impact of the almost-29% overall cut in physician pay called for by Medicare’s Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) formula.
If just the close-to-20% cut for radiation therapy centers goes into effect, 35% of practices said they would probably have to close their doors, and 64% said they would consolidate. Both actions would lead to longer wait times for treatment, said ASTRO CEO Laura Thevenot in a briefing with reporters.
The consequences may also mean that physicians will spend less time with patients – that is, with those patients who would still be able to access a radiation oncologist. Some 70% of respondents said they would limit Medicare patients if the cuts go through, and 49% said they would stop accepting Medicare patients altogether.
Radiation oncologists also said they would cut back on purchases of new technology and lay off support staff and other nonphysician employees.
"The likely end result for limited access to radiation therapy – an integral form of care used in nearly 70% of all cancer patients – would be an erosion in the gains in cure rates, quality of life, and other clinical outcomes that have been achieved in our country over the last 20 years," said Dr. Constantine A. Mantz, a radiation oncologist in Ft. Myers, Fla., during the press briefing.
Ms. Thevenot said that the CMS had used faulty information to calculate the true costs of IMRT and SBRT, and that the agency should revisit the codes for both procedures.
Added Dr. Steinberg in a statement, "ASTRO welcomes a comprehensive review of these procedure codes and supports the necessary sophistication of a process, such as provided by the [American Medical Association’s Relative Value Scale Update Committee (RUC)], to value complex medical procedures including IMRT and SBRT." He is also professor and chairman of radiation oncology at the University of California, Los Angeles.
According to Ms. Thevenot, IMRT was reviewed by AMA’s RUC in fall 2010, and SBRT was reviewed in February 2011.
The ASTRO has also enlisted the support of Congress to overturn the cuts. Representatives Joe Pitts (R-Penn.) and Frank Pallone (D-N.J.), along with Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.), have been circulating a letter decrying the cuts that will eventually be sent to officials at the CMS. The organization says that a "similar bipartisan letter is being drafted in the Senate."