Last week, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued fiscal 2012 proposed payment rates for doctors, outpatient hospitals, and dialysis centers. The proposed rule links payments for outpatient services and ambulatory surgical centers to quality of care. Additionally, the proposed rule would allow certain physician-owned hospitals to request a waiver from the healthcare reform law’s ban on expansion.
Outpatient departments are scheduled to get a 1.5 percent fee increase, while ambulatory surgical centers would get a 0.9 percent bump. CMS predicts that it will pay out almost $42 billion to more than 4,000 hospitals that participate in the outpatient payment system in 2012; some 5,000 ambulatory surgical centers meanwhile will get almost $3.5 billion.
In its rule on physician pay, CMS proposed roughly $200 million in cuts for imaging procedures. When a doctor performs multiple imaging procedures — such as CT scans and MRIs — on the same patient on the same day, payment won’t be the same for every test. CMS said it plans to pay for the first procedure in full, then apply a 50 percent cut to the “professional component” portion of the bill for each subsequent test.
The physician payment rule must reflect current law — which, under the much-maligned “sustainable growth rate” formula (SGR), calls for a nearly 30 percent cut in doctors’ payments at the end of the year. CMS accounted for that cut in the rule, as it’s required to do, but also took the opportunity to call for a permanent fix to the formula.