Six Month Medicare Patch Once Again Slows Medicare Meltdown

June 24, 2010

Six Month Medicare Patch Once Again Slows Medicare Meltdown

On Thursday, June 24, the House passed H.R. 3962, which provides a 2.2 percent Medicare fee schedule update for physician services through November 2010. The bill passed by a bipartisan vote of 417 to 1 and President Obama signed the bill into law on Friday, June 25.

The 2.2 percent update provided by H.R. 3962 would replace the 21 percent Medicare cut currently in effect, and be applied retroactively to claims for services provided on or after June 1.

In a statement issued shortly after the vote, AMA President Cecil B. Wilson, MD, said the six-month Medicare patch Congress passed is a temporary reprieve for seniors and baby boomers who rely on the promise of Medicare.

”Delaying the problem is not a solution. It doesn’t solve the Medicare mess Congress has created with a long series of short-term Medicare patches over the last decade – including four to avert the 2010 cut alone.

“Seniors are already experiencing access problems as a result of the complete congressional mismanagement of Medicare over the years. About one in four Medicare patients looking for a new primary care physician are having trouble finding one. About one in five physicians are already limiting the number of Medicare patients they treat because of the instability and uncertainty of Medicare payment.

“In December, the Medicare physician payment cut will be a whopping 23 percent, increasing to nearly 30 percent in January. Congress is playing a dangerous game of Russian roulette with seniors’ health care. Sick patients can’t wait. Congress must replace the broken payment system before the damage is done and cannot be reversed.

“The baby boomers begin entering Medicare in six months, and if the physician payment problem isn’t fixed, these new Medicare patients won’t be able to find a doctor to treat them.

“End the political posturing and fix the problem: Health care for America’s seniors hangs in the balance. Congress needs to fix the broken Medicare physician payment system so physicians can continue to do what they love – care for patients.”