by Tim Rowan, Editor Emeritus
T
he battle for stable Home Health reimbursement rates continues full speed ahead on Capitol Hill, but the advocacy organizations engaged on the front lines of that battle are losing ground. The Partnership for Quality Home Healthcare and the National Association for Home Care and Hospice have deployed weapons from educating Congressional staffers to suing CMS. Those traditional methods appear to be insufficient, as the specter of draconian rate cuts casts a larger and larger shadow.
Missing from the conflict is the only effective weapon, flooding lawmakers with messages from their constituents.
According to Joanne Cunningham, CEO of the Partnership, the time is now to bring that weapon to the front. She told over 600 attendees at this week’s Home Care 100 event in Scottsdale that she and Bill Dombi have done everything they can up to now, adding that the only way to stop $3.5 to $5 billion in Medicare cuts is for every person of voting age whose livelihood depends on Home Health care to call or write their House Member and Senators.
STEP ONE: A "Must-Pass" Bill
“Preserving Access to Home Health Act of 2023,” is a pair of bi-partisan bills introduced into the House and Senate in the summer of 2023. (S.2137/H.R. 5159) They would prevent CMS from making new cuts to the PDGM payment system, both now and in the future, by blocking annual “recalculations” that traditionally use flawed formulae.
The bills would require MedPAC to perform more comprehensive calculations before it makes recommendations to Congress. Currently, the Commission only considers revenue and profit margins from traditional Medicare. They determine that Home Health margins are too high without looking at the small-to-negative margins providers accrue from Medicare Advantage, Medicaid, the VA, and private insurance. Medicare profit margins make it possible for HHAs to care for patients with stingier payers. Reducing those margins too far, which MedPAC recommends every year, would remove access to care for millions of beneficiaries.
STEP TWO: Educating Congress
Ms. Cunningham emphasized that elected officials, as well as bureaucrats who write the regulations to implement the “will of Congress,” have yet to understand the impact in-home care has on overall healthcare spending and access to care. “We have to get bureaucrats to look at our data,” she said. “We know we save the trust fund more than we take from it, and we know that we are turning patients away because we cannot pay enough to attract clinicians in sufficient numbers. We have to educate them all.” She offered a few concrete suggestions.
What Works Best
-
- Data, data, data. The most effective policy argument starts with independent analysis from outside the industry.
- Tell stories. Elected officials and their staffers respond to real-life experiences of people within their districts and states. A group from Inhabit Health, for example, sat Congressional staffers down and told them about individual patients who had been kept out of hospitals and EDs, about great care they had received. They added summaries of their typical patients as well.
- Listen. Staffers will challenge your assertions and ask hard questions. They will help you identify your ‘Achilles Heels.’ See this as helpful preparation for meeting the Member or Senator.
- See them at home. Cunningham underscored the importance of making appointments and meeting with House members and Senators away from DC, for two reasons.
- “A lot of people approach a Member on the way out of a church they both attend. What they don’t realize is that they are one of ten who will do the same thing between the church door and his car, from ten different industries. You just become ‘part of the clutter’ and are quickly forgotten.”
- Back home advocacy is the most important thing you can do; it is even better than going to DC. Their main interest is re-election and they respond to messages from constituents. The purpose of advocacy is to cut through the noise. At home, you can say, “Hey, I know you; you’re my neighbor; listen to me!”
- Repetition is key. When you write a letter, it goes on a list. Staffers count up how many constituents have written about each issue. The best strategy is to make them feel pressure from back home. Marshall all the political pressure you can, but fill it with data.
Case in Point
Ms. Cunningham told about leading a group of Home Health providers from Oregon to meet with Senator Ron Wyden in his home office. To make their case for Home Health reimbursement support, they showed him their books, which proved that MedPAC is wrong about Home Health profit margins. They changed his mind. She said that meeting was so powerful and successful, it has become a model for working with other states.
STEP THREE: Expose Medicare Advantage
The Partnership’s goal is to ensure alignment of the MA home health benefit with traditional Medicare – as all Medicare beneficiaries are all entitled to the same home health benefit, regardless of the payor.
“MedPAC met during the first week of January to discuss Medicare Advantage. The meeting, which included a focus on the methodology of payments, was contentious at times.” Cunningham said. “In its January 12 report to Congress, The Medicare Advantage Program: Status Report, MedPAC forecast that CMS will overpay MA plans as much as $88 billion in 2024, based on prior year behavior.”
Higher coding organizations have a competitive advantage because they receive larger payments for enrolling the same beneficiaries as other organizations, and they can offer more extra benefits and attract new enrollees simply because of their coding efforts
MA’s focus on extras such as Silver Sneakers, vision care, and basic dental care, along with low or zero premiums added to the Medicare Part B premium that all beneficiaries pay, are what MA plans emphasize in their annual barrage of TV commercials. Never mentioned on TV or in direct mail brochures are two practices that impact many times more dollars than gym memberships and low premiums. The undeserved $88 billion mentioned in the MedPAC report comes from exaggerating initial assessments of plan enrollees. Payments from Medicare to a plan hinge on patient acuity. When improperly padded, acuity robs the trust fund and pads insurance company profits.
The second downplayed practice is on the care side of the equation. The largest MA plans have often been found to deny procedures that traditional Medicare standards would have covered. When they do pay for care, especially Home Healthcare, they pay rates below traditional Medicare rates, often lower than provider costs. Cunningham concluded her comments with a description of the Partnership’s efforts to bring pressure from MedPAC and the HHS OIG to force MA plans to comply with regulatory requirements. “We are all of one mind regarding MA. I think we are going to see practices change.”
About PQHH
The Partnership for Quality Home Healthcare was established in 2010 to work in partnership with government officials to ensure access to quality home healthcare services for all Americans. Representing community- and hospital-based home healthcare agencies nationwide, the Partnership is dedicated to developing innovative reforms to improve the program integrity, quality, and efficiency of home healthcare for our nation’s seniors.
pqhh.org
# # #
Tim Rowan is a 30-year home care technology consultant who co-founded and served as Editor and principal writer of this publication for 25 years. He continues to occasionally contribute news and analysis articles under The Rowan Report’s new ownership. He also continues to work part-time as a Home Care recruiting and retention consultant. More information: RowanResources.com
Tim@RowanResources.com
©2024 by The Rowan Report, Peoria, AZ. All rights reserved. This article originally appeared in Healthcare at Home: The Rowan Report.homecaretechreport.com One copy may be printed for personal use: further reproduction by permission only. editor@homecaretechreport.com