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RFK Jr. weighs major changes to how Medicare pays physicians
RFK Jr. weighs major changes to how Medicare pays physicians
Kennedy and advisers say the system drives doctors to perform costly surgeries rather than combating chronic disease.
Medicares payment formula rewards medical providers for surgeries and other costly procedures rather than for prevention and primary care. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
By Dan Diamond
Updated November 21, 2024 at 6:35 p.m. EST | Published November 21, 2024 at 5:24 p.m. EST
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his advisers are considering an overhaul of Medicares decades-old payment formula, a bid to shift the health systems incentives toward primary care and prevention, said four people who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberations.
The discussions are in their early stages, the people said, and have involved a plan to review the thousands of billing codes that determine how much physicians get paid for performing procedures and services.
The coding system tends to reward health-care providers for surgeries and other costly procedures. It has been accused of steering physicians to become specialists because they will be paid more, while financial incentives are different in other countries, where more physicians go into primary care and health outcomes are better.
Although policymakers have spent years warning about Medicares billing codes and their skewed incentives, the matter has received little national attention given the challenge of explaining the complex issues to the public, the technicalities of billing codes and the financial interests for industry groups accustomed to how payments are set.
{snip}
By Dan Diamond
Dan Diamond is a national health reporter for The Washington Post. He joined The Post in 2021 after five years at Politico, where he won a George Polk award for investigating the Trump administration's response to the coronavirus pandemic.follow on X @ddiamond
Kennedy and advisers say the system drives doctors to perform costly surgeries rather than combating chronic disease.
Medicares payment formula rewards medical providers for surgeries and other costly procedures rather than for prevention and primary care. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
By Dan Diamond
Updated November 21, 2024 at 6:35 p.m. EST | Published November 21, 2024 at 5:24 p.m. EST
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his advisers are considering an overhaul of Medicares decades-old payment formula, a bid to shift the health systems incentives toward primary care and prevention, said four people who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberations.
The discussions are in their early stages, the people said, and have involved a plan to review the thousands of billing codes that determine how much physicians get paid for performing procedures and services.
The coding system tends to reward health-care providers for surgeries and other costly procedures. It has been accused of steering physicians to become specialists because they will be paid more, while financial incentives are different in other countries, where more physicians go into primary care and health outcomes are better.
Although policymakers have spent years warning about Medicares billing codes and their skewed incentives, the matter has received little national attention given the challenge of explaining the complex issues to the public, the technicalities of billing codes and the financial interests for industry groups accustomed to how payments are set.
{snip}
By Dan Diamond
Dan Diamond is a national health reporter for The Washington Post. He joined The Post in 2021 after five years at Politico, where he won a George Polk award for investigating the Trump administration's response to the coronavirus pandemic.follow on X @ddiamond
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RFK Jr. weighs major changes to how Medicare pays physicians (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Nov 22
OP
Walleye
(36,458 posts)1. Brain worms. Why do these wealthy people have any say at all over what the rest of us need. They can't know.
RandySF
(71,152 posts)2. Does he even understand how it works?
no_hypocrisy
(49,233 posts)3. "Costly surgeries" probably save lives.
Anything from removing a malignant mole to triple bypass surgery.
A non-physician second-guessing surgeons.
And your surviving family can't sue the federal government for your death.
On edit: Doctors, Surgeons, and AMA, is THIS what you envisioned with Make America Great Again?
bucolic_frolic
(47,636 posts)4. Betting the farm on Americans adopting lifestyle changes
Primary care Doctors only suggest. They know 80% of patients will only do it half-heartedly or for a month or two.
Likely that Americans prefer a diet of cheesecake, ice cream and carbs along with gall bladder surgery rather than an austere diet and a healthier life. No disease is going to afflict them, amiright?
dalton99a
(84,922 posts)5. Primary care docs can only make guesses and prescribe meds
To properly diagnose a problem and fix it, you need a specialist