Wednesday, January 16, 2013
Inside CMS - 01/10/2013

Radiation Stakeholders Miffed Over Cliff Deal That Cuts 'Gamma Knife' Pay

Key radiation stakeholders were caught off-guard by a pay cut to a high-cost stereotactic radiosurgery instrument -- called Gamma Knife - that sources say was quietly tucked into the fiscal cliff deal at the last minute as a way to offset the one-year "doc fix" and they are urging lawmakers to get CMS to re-examine the payment rates through the regulatory process. The provision gleans at least $300 million by lowering payments for the Gamma Knife technology -- which is manufactured by Sweden's Elekta and widely used in brain cancer treatment -- to put them in line with payments for linear accelerator-based (or LINAC) stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) instruments, many of which are produced by California-based Varian Medical Systems.1395 words
 

Hospitals Urge MedPAC To Rethink Proposals Due To $11 B In Cliff Cuts

Hospitals are appealing to Congress' Medicare payment advisors to rethink draft payment proposals they plan to take up Thursday (Jan. 10), saying the proposals when taken in conjunction with the $11billion hit to hospitals in the fiscal cliff law's "doc fix" and upcoming sequestration cuts would be an unwarranted payment cut across the industry. In a letter to the commissioners, the American Hospital Association and the Federation of American Hospitals say hospitals need much bigger payment updates than called for by the draft recommendations.791 words
 

Coburn Leaves Finance As Toomey, Portman, Isakson Enter Committee

In a decision that surprised health care stakeholders, Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK) will not sit on the powerful Senate Finance Committee in the 113th Congress, a change that comes as lawmakers are expected to tackle deficit reduction and reforms to the tax code and federal health care programs -- which all fall under the committee's jurisdiction -- over the coming year.573 words
 

Beneficiaries Await Details Of Calif. Duals Demo Agreement

California, the state proposing to cover by far more dually eligible beneficiaries than any of the CMS demonstrations approved to date, is poised to release its agreement with the agency, a Medicaid beneficiary advocate says, and beneficiary advocates are eagerly awaiting the details as an indicator of how far CMS is willing to let the state demos go. Some lawmakers have raised concerns that CMS' duals demonstrations cover too many beneficiaries, which they say could threaten the quality of care for the poor, but others say CMS and states should use the demos to more aggressively move duals into managed care.353 words
 

Lankford To Chair New Oversight Panel On Health Care, Entitlements

Rep. James Lankford (R-OK) will chair a reconfigured energy, health care and entitlements subcommittee within the House Oversight Committee, the committee announced Wednesday (Jan. 2). Previously, the Oversight health subcommittee did not have "entitlements" in its title, and the change could suggest that the issue will be a high-profile subject in 2013.216 words
 

UnitedHealth Group Pitches Managed Care, FFS Medicare Reforms

UnitedHealth Group is touting a new proposal to reduce health spending that calls for Medicare and Medicaid to be updated to include strategies already successfully implemented by health plans, employers and states -- including use of "administrative services organizations" in fee-for-service Medicare to manage beneficiaries' health benefits and increased reliance on managed care for dual eligibles beyond current CMS demonstrations.815 words
 

Medicare Spending Grew Faster in 2011, But Still Historically Low

While the overall growth in health care spending remained at historically low levels in 2011, according to a CMS analysis of national health expenditures, Medicare spending grew faster than other health sectors areas and one expert says that could become a rallying cry for entitlement reform in the coming months.705 words
 

PCORI To Start Funding More-Specific, Larger Research Projects

PCORI plans to announce this year specific, and larger, research projects that it will fund, breaking from a more general research agenda for which it has been criticized, said Joe Selby, executive director of the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute. The shift might allow PCORI to give more money for individual projects, he said, and PCORI also would like to help fund a national research database.636 words
 

New Commission Holds Talks On State-Based Cost Control Strategies

A new broad-based stakeholder commission, chaired by two former governors, held a conference call Tuesday (Jan. 8) as it works to put together a blueprint by November on practical ways for states to control health care spending. Reviewing scope of practice, encouraging implementation of state-based delivery and payment reforms and helping residents become wiser health care consumers were among the list of ideas commissioners discussed.579 words
 

CLASS Backers Hope Commission Crafts Long-Term Care Alternatives

Proponents of the health reform law's voluntary long-term care insurance program that was repealed in the recently enacted "fiscal cliff" legislation say they are hopeful a new long-term care commission created by that same bill will provide another opportunity to move forward on a long-term care plan, sources tell Inside Health Policy, though an alternative to the CLASS program is far from clear.616 words
 

NAIC Says States Should Be Able To Phase In Health Law's 3:1 Age Rating

The National Association of Insurance Commissioners says CMS should give states flexibility to phase in the health reform law's new 3:1 age rating restrictions that apply in 2014, echoing the concerns raised by insurers that immediately enacting a 3:1 age rating could result in rate shocks that would result in younger individuals dropping coverage. The stance seems to be at odds with that of some of the commission's own consumer representatives, who say that any move to phase in the law's age rating restrictions would have to be enacted through a legislative change as CMS does not have the regulatory authority to make the move on its own.570 words
 

Therapists Blast Pay Reduction In Cliff Deal As Blunt Cost-Cutting Policy

Therapist advocates complain that fiscal cliff negotiators' decision to cut $1.8 billion in payments for therapy multiple procedures, an offset for the one-year Medicare physician payment patch, is blatantly unfair as it cuts across therapy disciplines that are normally paid separately, and some advocates say they will seek to have the cuts eliminated or at least to lessen their impact on therapists. The newly enacted fiscal cliff bill reduces payments for subsequent therapies when therapies are provided on the same day.572 words
 

Medicaid Tops List Of State Fiscal Issues For 2013, NCSL Survey Shows

Medicaid tops the list of fiscal issues for state legislatures in 2013, according to a survey of state legislative fiscal officers by the National Conference of State Legislatures, and more than half of the states are gearing up to address rising health care costs and ACA implementation issues in the new year. The survey offers a snapshot of Medicaid funding issues facing dozens of states as they decide whether to expand the program or reshape it in other ways to cut back costs.866 words
 

CO-OP Stakeholders Seek To Restore Funds Cut In Fiscal Cliff Deal

State health cooperatives were "blind-sided" by Congress' 11th-hour decision in fiscal cliff talks to strip nearly all remaining funding from the health reform law's Consumer Oriented and Operated Plans (CO-OP) and plan to mount an aggressive lobby to get the funding restored, National Association of State Health Cooperatives (NASCHO) President John Morrison tells Inside Health Policy. Morrison points out that the lawmakers' decision came just hours after the December round of applications was submitted, calling the move a "tragic" deal that will result in only half the country having access to CO-OP plans and, as a result, bolster large insurance.798 words
 

SCOTUS Sets Oral Arguments For Preemption, Patent Settlement Cases

The Supreme Court scheduled oral arguments in two highly-watched drug preemption and patent settlement cases for March. The high court will hear Mutual Pharmaceutical Co. v Bartlett, a generic drug preemption case, March 19, followed by oral arguments in a case examining the legality of patent settlements, FTC v. Watson Pharmaceuticals, et al., March 25.189 words
 

HHS Delays MS Exchange Decision; 19 States, DC Get Conditional Approval

The head of CMS' Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight said Thursday (Jan. 3) that Mississippi's application to have a state-based exchange has neither been approved nor denied by the administration because there is disagreement in the state about whether it can oversee all exchange activities. The move comes despite the fact that HHS is required by the health reform law to certify state-based exchanges by Jan. 1, 2013, and if by that date the HHS Secretary determines that the state will not have an exchange operational by 2014, HHS must run a federal exchange.645 words
 

Hospitals Upset Coding Adjustments Used As SGR Offset

Hospitals are deeply disappointed in Congress' decision to offset the one-year Medicare physician payment patch by recouping $10.5 billion in coding adjustments from the providers, a move fiscal cliff negotiators appear to have taken in lieu of cutting hospital evaluation & maintenance funding, cuts also vehemently opposed by the industry. One hospital association official said that in the wake of $95 billion in hospital cuts over the past three years it's time for legislators to look elsewhere for healthcare savings during debt limit talks in February.701 words
 

Consumers Met OMB Dec. 27 To Seek Issuance Of Strict Sunshine Rule

Consumer advocates met with White House officials Dec. 27 to urge them to quickly review the long-overdue physician-payment disclosure regulation and reject several revisions sought by the American Medical Association, according to consumer representatives who attended the meeting. CMS officials last year said they hoped to release the regulation by the end of 2012, and a couple of physician groups pointed out to the agency last week that it missed that goal.716 words
 

Health Sectors Brace For Cuts As Entitlement Reform Calls Persist

While the "fiscal cliff" and a one-year "doc fix" are behind them, health care stakeholders are bracing for lawmakers to again go after the sector in the coming weeks as a part of larger deficit reduction efforts, especially now that Congress has less than two months to figure out how to stop the automatic spending cuts called for by sequestration as well as raise the debt ceiling, sources tell Inside Health Policy.1012 words
 

Vitals

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JAMA Study: Patient Requests, Industry Gifts Lead To Lower Generic Use

Nearly four out of 10 physicians surveyed said they "sometimes or often" prescribe brand-name drugs over generics because patients ask them to, and drug company relationships with physicians exacerbate the trend, according to a study published Monday (Jan. 7) by JAMA Internal Medicine. Generic drugmakers said the study shows there are savings to be achieved by turning to generics, while Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America countered that physician prescribing decisions are influenced by a slew of factors such as formularies, clinical guidelines and continuing education.766 words
 

Stakeholders Gear Up For Biosimilar Substitution Battle In 2013

FDA's first biosimilar approval is not expected this year, but debate is anticipated at the federal and state level over substitution policies, including naming, interchangeability and automatic substitution standards, according to industry sources following the new pathway. Sources also said 2013 will be a critical year for smoothing out kinks in the biosimilar review process to determine whether the health reform-created pathway will prove lucrative to drug makers and provide health care savings.1063 words
 

MA Governor Seeks More Compounding Oversight

Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick (D) on Friday (Jan. 4) unveiled a legislative proposal and additional measures to beef up his state's oversight of pharmacy compounding by enhancing inspections and reforming the state board of pharmacy -- a proposal that builds on recommendations released the same day by Massachusetts' newly formed pharmacy compounding commission. Rep. Ed Markey (D-MA) said the proposal is a "robust state complement" to a bill he plans to re-introduce in the new Congress to beef up federal oversight of large-scale compounding pharmacies.797 words
 

Vertex Snags First Two FDA Breakthrough Designations

Vertex Pharmaceuticals this week said it received FDA's first two breakthrough drug designations and will use the designations to expand uses for its landmark cystic fibrosis drug Kalydeco, ending widespread speculation about which company received the initial designations enacted by the FDA Safety and Innovation Act. The drug, although approved before the new program existed, was seen as an example of the type of product that could be a breakthrough candidate, according to a stakeholder who backed the program's inclusion in FDASIA.781 words
 
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