Showing posts with label SB 923. Medicare RBRVS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SB 923. Medicare RBRVS. Show all posts

Friday, August 17, 2012

OPPOSE PROPOSED WORKERS COMP REFORM MEASURE, BRIEFLY KNOWN AS SB 863, A GUT AND AMEND VEHICLE

WHY THE PROPOSED WORKERS' COMP REFORM MEASURE WITH A SHORT HALF-LIFE AS SB 863 SHOULD  BE DEFEATED  

SB 863 was originally chosen to be the gut-and-amend vehicle for this proposed workers' comp travesty.  We have revised our own original text. Where it previously said SB 863 for a few hours, it now only says "the proposed workers' comp reform measure" albeit with a hiss and a spit every now and then.

We previously opposed SB 923 because it would shove the Medicare RBRVS down the throats of injured workers and their treating doctors. The idea of this bill was to replace the low pay Official Medical Fee Schedule (OMFS) with the still lower paying Medicare RBRVS.  The upshot would be loss of access to specialty care.  It would foist on Primary Treating Physicians (PTPs) a level of care requirement beyond their training. 

We now find that the provisions of SB 923 are hidden within 279 pages of proposed legislative language. When 279 pages of a legislative proposal are sprung at the end of session we suspect that somebody is getting ambushed. In this case it's the injured workers and their access to specialty care.

We have supported AB 1687 which would open up the Utilization Review (UR)  process a little and give injured workers a chance. The proposed workers' comp reform measure wipes that opportunity out because it proposes an Independent Medical Review (IMR) process that will protect the worst aspects of the current UR process, namely, the allowed process of letting doctors who don't interview or examine specific injured workers to overrule the decisions of the doctors who have interviewed and examined them.

The 279 pages referenced above arrogantly protect this unfair system by establishing an IMR process that will be even harder to appeal against than the current already obtuse UR system. 

One is obliged to ask how a system that alleges it'll put an additional $700 million into Permanent Disability (PD) could be bad for injured workers. The answer lies in the claim that it'll also reduce costs by $1.4 billion. We are not told who will get the left over $700 million.  We are not told that management groups of non-physicians who charge groups of treating doctors for administrative services will be allowed to raise their management fees. While they may pay the PTPs a little more, they're not obliged to do so.

Here's what else the 279 pages tell us, well, some of it, anyway:

The proposed workers' comp reform measure currently plans to impose $150 mandatory filing fees for liens. Once the doctors are then short-changed and obliged to file fees for liens anyway, they'll reconsider if they should stay in the system.

The proposed workers' comp reform language  currently plans to impose a copy service fee that will further slow down injured workers' ability to prove their workers' comp cases.

The proposed workers' comp reform measure will curtail some of the features currently allowed by the otherwise already restrictive AMA Guides to Impairment currently used to establish reimbursable impairments re Activities of Daily Living (ADLs).

Sadly, the newly proposed workers' comp reform measure  has earned the right to be disgraced before it is defeated. It also exposes how the gut-and-amend process may be abused and misused.

Friday, August 10, 2012

WORKERS COMP AMBUSH IN PROGRESS

WORKERS COMP AMBUSH sprung, well, almost!

Secretly, furtively, behind the proverbial closed doors that skilled political operatives deny exist, a carefully crafted bill has been sewn together by masters, namely, Angie Wei, legislative director of the California Labor Federation (CLF) and Sean McNally, vice president for corporate and government affairs at Grimmway Farms. The proposed legislation will boost profits for management groups while reducing access to specialty care for injured workers. CLF will justify the slashed medical benefit to injured workers by pointing out that the legislation will increase permanent disability benefits to injured workers by $700 million. CLF may not want to admit that the proposed legislation will also cut about $1.4 billion in costs in part by reducing access to specialty care. CLF may not disclose that many injured workers who need advanced or specialized medical care cease to become dues-paying union members. So what they think won't matter.

Voters Injured at Work (VIAW) takes particular offense at having the Official Medical Fee Schedule (OMFS) supplanted by the Medicare RBRVS. SB 923 (Deleon) failed last year but is still on the current agenda as a two-year bill. Its provisions are included in the current concoction that CLF and Grimmway have grimly crafted.  This column has already exposed who stands to benefit from SB 923 (see our glossary). This provision as either an independent bill or as part of a so-called reform package is designed to reduce payments to specialists, particulary focussing on procedures. Its design supposedly  increases payments to primary care physicans (PTPs) -- but neither SB 923 nor the so-called reform package tell you which management groups supporting these bills derive their income by charging management fees to PTP groups such as US Health Works. Hence, one of the beneficiaries is the management entities that deploy salaried physicians.

VIAW puts it this way: "Injured workers need both primary care physicians and specialists, but VIAW cannot support any proposal that funds an increase for one class of physicians at the expense of another."

The California Society of Industrial Medicine and Surgery (CSIMS) pointed out that "Unfortunately, the unions didn't ask any injured workers to help with the legislation and the large employers didn't ask small employers."

The Senate Republican Caucus stated that "the fact that insurers and non-unionized, non-self-insured/smaller employers are not at the negotiating table should be cause for some concern."

Not all stakeholders have fully displayed their own hands so far. We await up to date comment from the California Medical Association (CMA), the California Applicants Attorneys Association (CAAA), the Union of American Physicians and Dentists (UAPD), and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME, AFL-CIO). We await action from physicians' specialty organizations such as the California Neurology Society (CNS filed a  letter against SB 923), and the professional groups that claim to represent other specialties such as the orthopedists, the physical medicine and rehab doctors, and specialists in pain management.

CMA's position on SB 923 is "oppose unless amended" while the UAPD's position is "watch." Watch what, we wonder?  Will CMA expand its "unless amended" statement and lobby legislative offices?

Next in line for concern and comment is Utilization Review. This column has already  discussed AB 1687 (Fong), supported by the UAPD and CSIMS (see our glossary again).  The reform package adds a new level of bureaucracy. The Labor Code would be altered such that treatment or medication disputes, including surgical options, would go to an Independent Medical Review (IMR). Like the current Utilization Review (UR) process, the IMR assignee would not interview or examine the patient, thereby preserving the worst part of the current UR process. The only grounds for appeal would be fraud, bias, or conflict of interest. We await commentary and action from CAAA on this method of protecting wrongul UR.

The outlook is for the complete ambush to be sprung at the end of the current legislative session. Will a hasty vote by many legislators who haven't been adequately briefed come down to a last minute trade-a-vote exchange?

References for further study

"Medical Development Trends in California Workers' Compensation, Accident Years, 2002-2010, California Workers Compensation Institute

"Medical Benefit Delivery in California Workers' Compensation, changes in Network Utilization and Reimbursement, 2004-2010, CWCI

"California Workers Compensation, 2012," prepared by Mark Gerlach, California Applicants' Attorneys Association, January, 2012

"Workers' Compensation Reform: Undoing the Damage of Schwarzenegger's Rules," March, 2012, California Labor Federation

"How to take away even more Care from Injured workers," Robert L. Weinmann, MD,  California Progress Report, 5 July 2011

"How to practice medicine without a license," Robert L. Weinmann, MD, San Francisco Chronicle, 8/29/08

"Utilization Review as a gift to insurance companies," Totalcapitol.com, Bob Weinmann, 3/11/12

"UR a battleground in Comp Reform, Greg Jones, Western Bureau Chief, workcompcentral.com, 5/25/12

"Reforms would cut $1.4B to fund $700M benefits increase,"  Greg Jones, Western Bureau Chief, 8/10/2012

"Deal on California workers' comp likely," Mark Lifsher, Los Angeles Times, 8/09/12

"Reform appears to be on its way to California's workers' compensation system once more," California Society of Industrial Medicine and Surgery, 8/09/12










Monday, June 18, 2012


AB 1687 (FONG) DESERVES PASSAGE INTO LAW

SB 923 (DELEON) DESERVES DEFEAT   

UTILIZATION REVIEW particularly by companies owned, controlled, or supported by insurance companies has been recognized for escalations of cost associated with wrongful denials of treatment. Here's how it works:
1) Josephine Sheetrock gets injured on the job and receives authorized initial treatment from a Primary Treating Physician (PTP) who in turn belongs to a Medical Provider Network (MPN) with which her employer and insurance company have a contract to provide care for injured workers (IWs);
2) Josephine Sheetrock's treatment does not resolve the clinical problem so the PTP seeks authorization for specialty consultation;
3) The PTP's request for authorization for specialty consultation and/or diagnostic tests is denied;
4) An authorization denial letter couched in the language of formal Utilization Review is sent to the PTP (it tells the doc to peddle his papers elsewhere);
5) The formal language is derived from the American Medical Association's Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment, from the American College of Occupational and  Environmental Medicine (ACOEM), and from the current Medical Treatment Utilization Schedule (MTUS), all usually correctly quoted while being wrongly applied;
6) The PTP can file an appeal. It the PTP files appeals too often or too successfully, the PTP risks being dropped from the MPN;
7) The consequence is that formal appeals are often perfunctory, not made at all, and are often unsuccessful (Josephine Sheetrock goes without treatment and is obliged to "go legal," i.e., to retain an attorney who specializes in workers compensation).

*** HMOs, other managed care organizations, and Knox-Keene Plans use similar mechanisms to delay or deny care. Money that should be allocated to patient care is retained by insurance companies, cooperative Utilization Review companies, and for enhanced executive compensation. 

*** AB 1687 (Fong) which applies to workers comp should be passed into law. It will help level the playing field by requiring full disclosure for denied care and by increasing access by injured workers  to lawyers who specialize in workers compensation;

*** SB 923 (Deleon) which also applies to workers comp should be defeated because it will deprive PTPs and their patients from access to specialty care. 

References

See our postings for 1 June 2012, 21 May 2012, and previous postings re workers compensation in http://www.politicsofhealthcare.com

Totalcapitol.com

California Progress Report

San Francisco Chronicle, 8/29/08 ("How to practice medicine without a license")

These articles include reviews of previous attempts to require California state licensure for UR doctors and are available on line, e.g., concerning AB 2968 (Lieber),  AB 933 (Fong), and AB 584 (Fong).



Thursday, May 3, 2012

HOW SB 923 WILL PROTECT INJURED WORKERS OUT OF THE HEALTHCARE THEY ALREADY HAVE


THE INJURED WORKERS WHO WILL BE HARMED MOST IF SB 923 (De Leon) becomes law are those whose jobs predispose them to serious injuries, e.g., construction workers and farmers, telephone repair workers, restaurant workers, freight handlers, even health care personnel (one health care worker was killed on the job in 2011) and other maintenance workers. SB 923 should bite the dust this year just as it did last year.

Ostensibly, the reason for SB 923 is to enable use of the Medicare RBRVS to pay for physicians' services to injured workers. The idea is to reduce payment to specialists so that payment to primary treating physicians (PTPs) can be increased. The proposed mechanism is to replace the current Office Medical Fee Schedule (OMFS) with the Medicare RBRVS.

But there's a catch. While SB 923 will reduce payment to specialists, it will not necessarily increase pay to the PTPs. In fact, the bill as currently written does not guarantee this outcome. In a personal letter by this writer to Daniel Crowley, Chairman and CEO of US HealthWorks, 6/24/2011, it was pointed out that SB 923 will cause specialists to withdraw from providing services to injured workers. Speaking to one of the committees that heard the bill last year, Stuart Bussey, MD, JD, president of the Union of American Physicians and Dentists, Local 206 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME, AFL-CIO) acknowledged that SB 923 might give PTPs a temporary "boost." Bussey also said that it would leave him, as a PTP, "holding the bag" for malpractice when he couldn't get specialists in timely fashion for seriously injured workers. Eventually, the UAPD went "neutral" or "watch" on the bill. The bill failed when a consortium of opponents teamed up to oppose it, an unlikely coalition led by the California Society of Industrial Medicine and Surgery (CSIMS).

Opposition to SB 923 also included the California Medical Association,  the California Orthopedic Association, the California Chiropractic Association, the California Neurology Society, the Interfaith Community of Los Angeles, the League of United Latin American Citizens, Voters Injured at Work, Latino Comp, La Raza Roundtable, and numerous individuals including injured workers who understood that the bill would protect them out of the healthcare protection they already had.

The Other Catch is how SB 923 is sponsored and how US Health Works gets paid. When USHW gets paid for providing care to injured workers, a portion of the money goes to the non-physician management company and to the investors who own the USHW clinics. Not all the money that the Medicare RBRVS conversion raises would go to the PTPs. Payment for management services is paid by the physicians, the PTPs. SB 923 as written doesn't preclude USHW from increasing its management fees to the PTPs. Once the doctors' group has received this  pay increase thanks to passage of SB 923 the next step will be to share it with the management group. Some pundits think that this factor is the real reason USHW executives are pushing for passage of SB 923.

Does the OMFS pay too much? The OMFS was set up in  1975 as a market-based mechanism (the Medicare RBRVS is not). Specialists are paid 5% less for specialty procedures now than they were in 1986. By contrast, the Evaluation and Management codes (E & M codes) for PTPs have been increased three times since 1986.

Unpredicted consequences of SB 923 are likely to include loss of Medical Provider Networks (MPNs) when the MPNs lose enough specialists such that they no longer meet the standards of the Labor Code pursuant to the reforms implemented during the Schwarzenegger years since 2004 and passage into law of SB 899. Some states such as Hawaii and Texas had to revise their Medicare-based fee schedules to bring the specialists back in -- thereby defeating the very purpose of having voted in the Medicare RBRVS. The anticipated reductions in pay to the specialists would be from 20 to 48% under SB 923 -- at that rate many specialists would be obliged to quit the program. Robbing Peter to pay Paul is not sound economic policy.

Conclusion: SB 923 qualifies for our "bite the dust" recommendation. The OMFS is already low cost. Updating it is recommended. Getting rid of it would endanger the provision of care to injured workers.