Doctors,
nurses, therapists, and healthcare administrators want to help people as
much as possible. To do so, they must stay in business. Recent
Medicare changes make survival increasingly difficult for "home health"
agencies, which send visiting nurses, therapists (physical, occupational,
or speech therapists), social workers, and home health aides to work with
homebound seniors.
Typical
hospital stays are much shorter than they were 20 years ago.
In 1983, Medicare drastically changed payment procedures for hospitals.
Instead of paying per day, Medicare started paying a fixed sum for each
case, the specific amount based on the diagnosis. This system is
called "Diagnostic Related Groups" (DRGs); the hospital is paid the same,
whether the person stays 3 days or 2 weeks--which provides an overwhelming
incentive to cut costs by shortening hospital stays. Home is often
the best place to recuperate, anyway--but since 1983 patients go home "sicker,"
weaker, and with more complex needs than before.
Home
health agencies filled this "care gap," and rapidly grew to become a major
component of health care for seniors. The number of Medicare-certified
agencies grew from 5700 in 1989 to over 10,000 in 1997. Medicare
expenditures for home health grew dramatically during this period.
DRGs
did not apply to home health; agencies were paid per visit, provided that
the patient was homebound, the care ordered by a doctor, and that the visits
were "reasonable and necessary." Nurses and others all wrote voluminous
"documentation" to justify each case, and Medicare reviewers would periodically
"drop in" unannounced for a few days to check on things. Agencies
were not allowed to profit, but were reimbursed based on their specific
costs. Nevertheless, incentives to maximize visits were inherent
in the system, so services were sometimes "overutilized." This problem
was ignored for years, because the
whole arrangement kept people out of the hospital and
thus reduced expenses overall. As home health took a progressively
larger slice of the Medicare pie, however, people began noticing; in 1997
the cost-cutting axe fell.
In the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997, Congress required transition to a
"Prospective Payment System" (PPS), which will be similar
to the hospital DRG system. Details are currently being hammered
out. The switchover is required by next October, and an "Interim
Payment System" (IPS) is now operating. The IPS has serious flaws,
especially in that it inadvertently penalizes economical agencies and rewards
less efficient ones, because payment is based on an agency's historical
costs.
The
bottom line is that payments for home health care have dropped precipitously,
and another 15% reduction is slated for next October if PPS is not inaugurated
by then. Over 1200 agencies have folded in the past year. To
cut costs, agencies are reducing their visits, "discharging" patients earlier,
and may in some cases avoid even admitting complex (and costly) patients.
When
this happened in hospitals, home health filled the gap. Who will
now?
Current changes may result in many more people being
admitted to nursing homes, and may ironically cost more in the long run,
although the funding source will be different: Medicare doesn't cover
long-term placement--after a person "spends down" their assets, they become
a ward of the state in a nursing home.
The
current system is a bureaucratic nightmare that distracts nurses, therapists,
and social workers from doing their best work with clients. Hopefully
this will improve when PPS is implemented and the rules become more clear.
Legislation is currently moving through Congress which would mitigate some
of the problems caused by the IPS, would defer the 15% payment cut scheduled
for next October, and would allow until October 2000 for final implementation
of PPS.
In any
case, the trend is clear: services are being cut. It is thus
more crucial than ever to do all we can to maintain and improve our health.