Introduction
Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for the opportunity to testify today. I am pleased to discuss the
Medicare home health benefit and the Administration's efforts to reform the benefit. The
Administration is committed to reforming the way we pay for home health services and we
look forward to working with the Congress on these reforms. The Administration is also taking
a number of administrative steps to reform the benefit and I am pleased to discuss these as well.
Description of the Benefit
Under the home health benefit, Medicare pays for skilled health care and other services
related to the treatment of an illness or injury. To receive home health care, a beneficiary must
be under the care of a physician who has determined that medical care in the home is necessary
and who has prepared a plan of care. Furthermore, the beneficiary must be confined to the home
and must need intermittent skilled nursing care, or physical therapy or speech language
pathology services. Finally, care must be provided by a Medicare-certified home health agency
(HHA). If these requirements are met, Medicare will pay for:
As expected, Medicare beneficiaries using home health services tend to be in poorer health
than the general Medicare population (see chart). Two-thirds are women, and one-third live
alone. Forty-three percent have incomes under $10,000 per year.
Growth in Expenditures and Utilization
Expenditures for home health services are one of the fastest growing components of
Medicare. Expenditure growth is due to the increase in the number of visits per beneficiary
(intensity), the growth in the number of beneficiaries using home health services, and the growth
in the number of HHAs serving beneficiaries.
In terms of intensity growth, consider that in 1980, the average home health beneficiary
used 22 visits. This number grew to 33 visits in 1990, and about 76 visits per user for 1996.
In terms of growth in the number of beneficiaries using the benefit, in 1980,, 700,000
Medicare beneficiaries used the benefit. By 1990, 1.9 million, or 5.6 percent, of Medicare
beneficiaries had received home health services. This has increased to about 3.7 million, or
10.1 percent of beneficiaries, in 1996.
Finally, the number of HHAs participating in Medicare has grown from 3,125 in 1982 to
5,656 in 1990, to over 9,800 in 1996.
We have also seen that there is a dramatic variation in the use and cost of services across
regions of the country and even among States. For example, in 1994 the average number of
visits per beneficiary was 126 in Louisiana, 76 in neighboring Arkansas and in Florida, 97 in
Texas, 45 in New York, 46 in California, and 40 in Oregon. The national average visits per user
in 1994 was 66. Expenditures per person served vary widely, too. The national average program
payments per home health user in 1994 was $4,016. Compare this to $6,700 in Louisiana,
$4,595 in Florida, $3,334 in New York, and $3,118 in Oregon.
Reasons for Expenditure and Utilization Growth
The dramatic increase in utilization and expenditures for home health is due to a number of
factors, including policy changes, changing demographics, medical advances, and increases in
demand by beneficiaries and physicians. With respect to policy changes, some had unintended
consequences. While they were often undertaken with the belief that they would reduce total
costs by shifting resource use from more expensive (hospital) to less expensive (post-acute care)
settings, for the most part, these policy changes were not systematic attempts to reform
Medicare. Rather, they occurred piecemeal throughout the years to achieve specific objectives.
And, they may not have resulted in a reduction in total Medicare costs.
OBRA 1980 Liberalization
For the first fifteen years of the Medicare program, there were two distinct home health
benefits: a post-hospital home health benefit under Part A of the program, and a general home
health benefit under Part B. When Medicare was created in 1965, Part A (financed by the
Hospital Insurance, or HI Trust Fund) was designed to cover only hospitalizations and
short-term, recuperative, post-acute care in the home or other facilities. The coverage and
eligibility rules of the post-hospital home health benefit reflected this emphasis. The Part A
benefit was limited to 100 visits available to those beneficiaries who were discharged from a
hospital following a minimum 3-day stay. There was no beneficiary cost-sharing for the Part A
benefit. The Part B benefit did not have a post-acute care focus and as such did not have a
hospital stay requirement. It covered 100 visits during a calendar year. The Part B deductible
applied to the Part B home health benefit and, until 1973, beneficiaries were required to pay
coinsurance for their Part B visits.
In the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1980 (OBRA 1980), Congress eliminated the
3-day prior hospitalization requirement under Part A, eliminated the 100-visit limits for both Part
A and Part B, eliminated the deductible for home health services under Part B, and permitted
proprietary HHAs to receive Medicare payments.
In effect, OBRA 1980 transformed the home health benefit into an unlimited benefit -- one
that serves the chronic needs of patients as well as the needs of those who require more
short-term, recuperative care after a hospital visit. Because Part B home health services are only
used now by that small group of beneficiaries who are not enrolled in Part A, the OBRA 1980
change had the unintended result of burdening the HI Trust Fund with financing approximately
99 percent of the home health benefit, regardless of whether visits are related to a hospital stay.
As you are aware, this is a problem we seek to fix in our legislative proposals.
OBRA 1980 also allowed for Medicare certification of proprietary home health agencies.
Payment to proprietary agencies -- which now represent 48 percent of all certified agencies -are
the fastest growing segment of Medicare home health expenditures. One analysis suggests that
beneficiaries receiving care from proprietary HHAs receive 21 more visits, on average, than
those receiving care from non-profit agencies, even after controlling for the differences in health
and functional status of the beneficiary, as well as age, sex, and living situation.
Duggan v. Bowen
In the early 1980s, HCFA attempted to control excessive growth in utilization through
enhanced review of claims, more detailed reporting, and other measures. However, these
attempts were thwarted by a 1988 court case, Duggan v. Bowen, the settlement of which resulted
in a re-interpretation of the "part-time or intermittent" eligibility criteria in a way that vastly
expanded the benefit's coverage. The impact of the Duggan settlement, on top of the OBRA
1980 changes, had a dramatic impact on home health utilization, as noted by the General
Accounting Office (GAO) in its March 1996 report on Medicare Home Health Growth
(GAO/HEHS-96-16).
In the aggregate, as a result of the OBRA 1980 changes and the Duggan settlement, we
have witnessed a steady growth in the number of home health visits per user and the number of
users. Much of the growth in home health outlays is due to patients who receive more than 100
visits per year. The Duggan settlement has been the catalyst for a 38 percent annual increase in
home health expenditures from 1988 to 1992, and a 167 percent increase in visits per beneficiary
from 1989 to 1995.
Impact of Hospital PPS
The implementation of the Prospective Payment System (PPS) for inpatient hospitals also
resulted in increased utilization of post-acute services such as home health, skilled nursing
facility services (SNFs), and rehabilitation services. Hospital PPS provides payment to hospitals
on the basis of diagnosis rather than the actual costs incurred by the hospital in providing care to
each patient. Hospitals responded to the incentives in PPS by, among other things, shortening
the lengths of stay. Patients were discharged earlier, with less complete recovery, resulting in
increased use of post-acute services. There has been a significant shift in Medicare spending
from PPS hospitals to post-acute providers such as home health agencies. In 1986, acute care
hospitals received more than 91 percent of Medicare Part A payments whereas post-acute care
providers received less than 9 percent of Part A payments, with HHAs receiving 4 percent. In
1993, however, the percentage of Part A payments to hospitals decreased to less than 74 percent
in 1993, while payments to post-acute care providers increased to more than 26 percent,
including 10.5 percent to HHAs.
Changing Demographics, Medical Advances, and Increases in Patient Demand
Changing demographics, medical advances, and increases in demand by beneficiaries and
physicians have all contributed to increasing expenditures. Medical advances, for example, have
expanded the range of patients who can benefit from certain therapies, and have made it possible
to provide interventions (such as intravenous drug therapy) in the home. Certainly, shifts in
demographics have had an immense impact on the use of post-acute and long-term care services.
Studies show that home health care is serving many more of the older elderly population who
require longer term care. Physicians and beneficiaries are increasingly showing a preference for
home health care over other modalities. In addition, HHAs are now aggressively marketing their
services to physicians to stimulate demand.
Fraudulent, Abusive, and Wasteful Practices
Our review of the supporting documentation for claims from some HHAs has revealed
alarming instances in which Medicare was billed for unnecessary or inappropriate. The
Medicare claim "error rate" was high as 75 percent in the case of one agency in Florida; that
means that 75 percent of the claims for that agency should not have been paid. Other HHAs have
had high error rates as well, and about a quarter of claims from the industry overall seem to be
inappropriate.
Most of the erroneous claims are for care that simply is not necessary -- that occur solely
for the purpose of earning money for the agency. Other erroneous claims are for services that are
not furnished at all or for beneficiaries who were not homebound. In addition, there were
significant numbers of instances in which the services were never ordered by a physician, or
where physician orders were forged. Finally, when there were physician plans of care for
Medicare beneficiaries, in too many instances the care that the beneficiary received was different
from that necessary for their recovery. As serious as it is to provide unnecessary services, it is
even more serious to fail to provide services that are necessary.
While we do not want to discourage appropriate use of the benefit, we simply cannot afford
to tolerate the fraudulent and abusive practices that exist in some parts of this industry. Current
law contains loopholes whereby providers can be paid excessive amounts. As I'll describe later,
we have several legislative proposals in the President's budget to close these loopholes. These
legislative proposals build on the successes of our anti-fraud initiatives such as Operation
Restore Trust (ORT) and the Medicare Home Health Initiative.
HCFA Administrative Efforts to Stem the Growth of Inappropriate Utilization and Costs
I want to reassure the Congress that HCFA has intervened where possible to stem the
growth of inappropriate utilization. I want to describe in some detail efforts we have undertaken,
or are undertaking, to address this concern.
Almost four years ago, I commissioned the Medicare Home Health Initiative, an
agency-wide, comprehensive assessment of the home health care benefit. The Initiative involved
consultation with representatives from consumer groups, the home health industry, professional
organizations, fiscal intermediaries, and State agencies. The Initiative has spawned various
efforts to make a number of improvements to the benefit and, where possible, assert greater
control over inappropriate utilization.
Conditions of Participation and OASIS
edicare Conditions of
Participation (CoPs) for HHAs and a requirement that HHAs collect information relating to an
Outcomes and Assessment Standard Information Set (OASIS). In tandem, these rules will hold
HHAs accountable for better, more accurate patient assessment, care planning, coordination of
service delivery, and quality assessment and performance improvement. Among other things,
these rules would require agencies to:
- Systematically assess patients to improve patient outcomes and to allow the
physician, agency practitioners, and the patient to make more appropriate clinical treatment
decisions. This OASIS data must be routinely collected and analyzed by each HHA. This
assessment data will form the basis of our ability to monitor individual agencies' overall quality
performance, focus external survey efforts on the detection of instances where patients may be
receiving fewer or more visits than necessary to achieve expected outcomes, and foster improved
home health care outcomes nationally.
- Implement quality assessment and performance improvement programs. The
proposed rule would raise the performance expectations for agencies by requiring them to
develop, implement, and maintain a data-driven continuous quality review and performance
improvement program.
- Improve care planning and coordination of services to reduce redundant or conflicting
treatments, eliminate confusion for the patient, and generally improve the level of care.
- Safeguard continuity of care by holding agencies responsible for the interdisciplinary
coordination and provision of all services ordered under that patients's physician-prescribed plan
of care. This standard addresses a current problem in which an agency may treat a patient for
only specific services and then refer that patient to several other agencies for the remainder of the
treatment.
- Strengthen patient rights protections and add to the current protections by requiring
agencies to (1) provide patients in advance with more detailed information on the care and
treatment to be provided, and (2) inform patients about expected outcomes and any barriers to
treatment.
- Require that a majority of services (nursing, therapy, social work and home health
aide) services furnished to home health patients be provided directly by staff employed by the
HHA, rather than by contracted personnel. This reflects HCFA's belief that excessive use of
contracted personnel may indicate that an agency is not exercising the appropriate level of
control over quality of care, or that an agency may be exceeding its patient capacity. This
standard would also better ensure coordination of care and care planning.
Revised HHA Manual
We also recently overhauled our provider manual to provide better guidance to agencies on
the complex home health eligibility and coverage rules. We expect this greater clarification to
reduce the amount of inappropriately furnished services that are billed to Medicare.
Physician Outreach
We have also worked to increase physician involvement in the monitoring of home care
services. Physician involvement in care plan oversight is critical to ensure that the appropriate
level of care is being provided. We need to avoid situations in which physician certification is
merely a rubber stamp of a plan of care that has been completed by a home health agency.
HCFA is now reimbursing physicians for care plan oversight to engage physicians in the careful
planning of home care services. We are also involved in a number of efforts to educate
physicians about the home care benefit. For example, HCFA has developed home health public
service announcements and other materials to educate physicians and their staffs regarding
developing a plan or care, monitoring patient progress, and detecting fraud and abuse.
Beneficiary Outreach
We are better educating beneficiaries about the home health benefit in an effort to help
them recognize instances of inappropriate care or fraud and abuse. We have published a new
home health brochure and have produced a video that is shown in hospital and office settings.
This year, we began sending Notice of Utilization statements (NOUS) to beneficiaries to
inform-them of the services being billed on their behalf so that they can detect any aberrancies.
Operation Restore Trust (ORT) Initiatives
In May 1995, President Clinton and Secretary Shalala launched ORT to improve efforts at
detecting and eliminating Medicare and Medicaid fraud, waste, and abuse. ORT is targeting four
areas of high spending growth, including home health care, in the five Sates that comprise more
than one-third of all Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries -- New York, Florida, Illinois, Texas,
and California. ORT has provided additional funding to allow for enhanced surveys on facilities
for which allegations of questionable activities have been received or that may have
inappropriately billed Medicare.
These enhanced ORT surveys facilitate the sharing of information between regional home
health intermediaries (RHHIs) and surveyors. Because surveyors make onsite visits to home
health agencies and to beneficiaries receiving services, they can identify information that can
assist an RHHI in making determinations about the appropriateness of claims. State survey
agencies are asked to identify and gather information on behalf of RHHIs concerning the
homebound status of beneficiaries, home health services billed but not rendered, and
inappropriate billing of supplies. HCFA has learned that often where there is fraudulent billing,
there are also quality deficiencies. Thus, the information from the RHHI helps the surveyors
focus on providers who are more likely to be delivering substandard care or otherwise failing to
meet CoPs. HCFA will be continuing to encourage the collaboration between RHHIs and State
survey agencies teams and expand this survey process to other States.
We will continue our diligence in attempting to stem the tide of inappropriate home health
utilization. As the GAO noted in its March 1996 report on Medicare home health growth, HCFA
is working to gain greater control over the use of the home health benefit.
Legislative Proposals
The Broader Context for Payment Reform: An Integrated Payment System
Before I delve into the specific legislative proposals, I want to emphasize that our HHA
payment proposal should be viewed as an interim step to an integrated payment system for
post-acute services. Many argue that the post-acute care payment system of the future must be
one that provides comparable incentives across delivery sites. While we will not stop our efforts
to develop a prospective payment system for HHAs and another for SNFS, we should not be
permanently wedded to separate payment systems for each of the self-contained postacute care
benefits. Rather, we should strive to better understand the value of each post-acute care provider
type and how to better manage and coordinate care across the health care continuum.
Payment reform should ultimately support an infrastructure of post-acute and long-term
care delivery systems that is better integrated and more flexible in meeting the needs of those
with chronic conditions and disabilities. That is, a guiding principle in any lasting reform of the
Medicare post-acute care benefits should be to make the system of services 'beneficiary
centered." To be beneficiary-centered, an integrated delivery system needs a reliable and
predictable stream of financing. It also requires a system of maintaining information on clients
that is consistent and available to all service providers. This kind of information is essential as
we work to target funds and determine how we go about fairly and accurately assessing what
kind of care someone needs. Beneficiary-centered services also rely on interdisciplinary case
management that
involves formal and informal caregivers and supports and encourages, where appropriate,
beneficiaries to direct their own care. Finally, a beneficiary centered system needs relatively
standardized service packages typically provided by various health care professionals.
There is considerable overlap in the types of services provided and the types of
beneficiaries that are treated in each of the post-acute settings. These distinctions are becoming
increasingly blurred with advancing technology. For example, physical therapy and other
rehabilitation services can be provided in each of the settings. A recent HCFA analysis shows
that 53 percent of beneficiaries treated in the hospital for hip fracture use SNF services, 14
percent use home health services, and 14 percent use rehabilitation hospital services. Similarly,
25 percent of patients treated in the hospital for stroke use SNF services, 26 percent use home
health services, and 16 percent use rehabilitation hospital services. While there may be some
clinical differences in the patients who go to each of these settings and in the outcomes as a result
of care provided in each of these settings, it is also likely that patient and physician preferences
influence which type of post-acute service is used.
Despite the considerable overlap, Medicare's payment and coverage rules vary by setting.
While I don't wish to discount the importance of beneficiary preference in making these
decisions, I would like to ensure that Medicare payment 's not the primary reason for care setting
decisions. Medicare payment methods and amounts for similar services provided in each of the
post-acute settings differ. And more expensive stays do not always imply more services or better
outcomes. For example, some provocative early research findings suggest that, for some
conditions, outcomes may be no better for beneficiaries treated in one setting than another, even
though Medicare payment may be substantially different. I am hopeful that further research into
the characteristics of patients that use care in each of the post-acute settings, and an analysis of
outcomes, can provide information about the most appropriate setting for different types of
patients.
As I've suggested, any effort to control the utilization of post-acute care services and ensure
equity and appropriateness of payment must involve a mechanism to track outcomes and services
that address patient care needs. Such a mechanism ideally begins with a valid and reliable
assessment screening instrument that would provide a preliminary assessment of the patient's
needs and the types of services that would best meet desired health outcomes at the lowest
possible cost. This type of instrument could also be used to assess the individual's values and
preferences for continuing care, so that if two or more types of care would typically provide the
desired outcomes at comparable costs, the individual could choose the type of care he or she
would receive under Medicare. Such an assessment ingrated reimbursement
system for post-acute services even as we focus our attention on developing a prospective
payment systems for HHAS.
Status of PPS Demonstration and Studies
We believe that it is critical to embark on a prospective payment system for home health
care as soon as it is viable, and we are committed to working with Congress to design a
prospective payment system that controls costs and also ensures quality and access. An
empirically valid and reliable PPS will provide incentives to HHAs to make the most
appropriate use of resources and, in the long term, will help control overall expenditures.
We have dedicated many resources toward developing a prospective payment system for
HHAS. In fact, we are in the process of testing a prospective payment system through the
National Home Health Agency Prospective Payment Demonstration. Demonstrations are very
useful in testing the appropriateness of specific payment methodologies in advance of full
implementation. They are also very useful in identifying methods that do not work well, and that
we would not want to implement.
Status of PPS Demonstration and Studies
We believe that it is critical to embark on a prospective payment system for home health
care as soon as it is viable, and we are committed to working with Congress to design a
prospective payment system that controls costs and also ensures quality and access. An
empirically valid and reliable PPS will provide incentives to HHAs to make the most
appropriate use of resources and, in the long term, will help control overall expenditures.
We have dedicated many resources toward developing a prospective payment system for
HHAS. In fact, we are in the process of testing a prospective payment system through the
National Home Health Agency Prospective Payment Demonstration. Demonstrations are very
useful in testing the appropriateness of specific payment methodologies in advance of full
implementation. They are also very useful in identifying methods that do not work well, and that
we would not want to implement.
PPS Demonstration
The National Home Health Agency Prospective Payment Demonstration is testing two
alternative methods of prospective payment. Phase I of the demonstration tested a per-visit
prospective payment. Phase II of the demonstration, which began in June 1995, is testing a
per-episode prospective payment, and will last for two more years.
In Phase I, we tested a per-visit payment method that established a separate payment rate
for each of six types of home health visits (i.e., skilled nursing, home health aide, physical
therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, and medical social services), and found that this
methodology is not effective in controlling home health expenditure growth.
In Phase II, we are examining the effect of an episode payment on spending, the number
and types of visits provided, and quality of care. Participating HHAs are receiving an
agency specific episode payment based on 120 days of care and outlier payments for episodes
that
extend beyond 120 days. The prospective rates are based on an agency's costs in a base year, and
are case-mix adjusted. Outlier visits are reimbursed at per-visit prospective rates. A new episode
of care does not begin until there has been a gap in home health services for 45 or more days
after the initial 120 days. Agencies receiving per-episode payments are subject to stop-loss and
profit sharing provisions.
We do not yet have results from this phase of the demonstration. While we do not yet have
an appropriate definition of an episode, we do know that we have concerns about a system based
on a 120-day episode with all visits after 120 days paid as outliers. Outliers should represent
unusual cases, not the norm. The integrity of a prospective payment system is violated if almost
half of all visits are classified and paid as outliers. Consequently, we are continuing to explore
through research the appropriate unit of payment and episode length.
Case-Mix Project
The case-mix adjuster used in the demonstration was developed to reflect case-mix changes
within an agency from year to year, not across agencies. In any prospective payment system that
we implement nationally, we would want a case-mix adjuster to differentiate case-mix across
HHAS. We are currently funding a project that will lead to this type of a case-mix adjuster. This
research will examine the relationship between patient characteristics and home health resource
use and develop a case-mix adjustment system for our PPS system. This research will utilize the
information on patient characteristics included in OASIS that all HHAs will be required to
complete. Agency recruitment will begin shortly, and data collection will begin in the Fall of
this year. Data collection will continue through October 1998 and analysis will take place
through the end of 1998.
Volume-Outcome Study
Developing a prospective payment system is further complicated by the wide variation in
the number of home health visits provided per home health user. In setting payment rate for a
prospective payment system, it is important to know, within a range, what the appropriate
amount of care is needed to produce the best possible patient outcomes. If HHAs are currently
over or under providing home health care, we do not want to create incentives in a prospective
payment system that continue the current utilization patterns. HCFA is sponsoring a study to
examine the relationship between the volume of home health services received and patient
outcomes. If this study is able to identify thresholds below and above which home health does
not contribute to better outcomes, this might help us develop a prospective payment system that
reflects the level of care that should be provided to produce the best possible patient outcomes.
The information we have gained from the demonstrations thus far laid the foundation for
the payment proposals that are included in the President's FY 1998 budget submission.
FY 1998 Legislative Proposals
We proposed a number of home health payment reforms designed to achieve needed cost
control, improve financial management, and control fraud and abuse. We have proposed interim
payment controls until we can transition into a PPS in 1999.
National Prospective Payment System
There is broad agreement among industry representatives, and members of Congress, that
prospective payment system is the superior way to constrain costs without sacrificing access
or quality. We have sketched out in our legislation some of the features that are desirable for
such a system. The essence of any prospective payment system is the unit of payment and
case-mix adjustments. The unit of payment for a home health prospective payment system
would need to be clearly defined. An appropriate case-mix adjuster that explains a significant
amount of the variation in cost is also essential. In order to prevent un-bundling, we would
anticipate that the prospective rate would cover all services currently covered and paid on a
reasonable costs basis under the Medicare home health benefit, including medical supplies.
The prospective payment amount would be adjusted annually by the HHA market basket
index. The labor portion of the prospective payment amount would be adjusted for geographic
differences in labor-related costs based on the most current hospital wage index. The Secretary
would have the authority to establish a payment provision for outliers, recognizing the need to
adjust payments due to unusual variations in the type or amount of medically necessary care.
Finally, if a beneficiary elects to transfer to, or receive services from, another HHA, we would
prorate the payment.
We are committed to implementing a prospective payment system for home health as soon
as possible. There is, however, critical work remaining to be done before we can implement such
a system -- namely, the development of a case-mix adjuster that can explain a significant amount
of variation in costs per case, and the development of an appropriate unit of payment. Our
legislative proposal seeks authority for the Secretary to implement a prospective system that
meets these parameters. However, since many key elements are still in development, we do not
believe that we can specify them in statute at this point. Our legislative proposal seeks authority
to request data from HHAs to support our continued development of the prospective payment
system.
Interim Payment System
While we continue to develop these essential features of a PPS system, we propose to
implement some interim changes to our existing payment system that would allow us to achieve
additional cost control. The Administration's proposal would rely on proven techniques of cost
limit reductions to achieve guaranteed, up-front savings without disrupting the industry with a
host of new payment methods.
In the interim, we would establish a new cost limit on top of the existing cost-based
reimbursement. This new cost limit would build on agencies' actual experience in resource use
per beneficiary in a base year. This cap on historical utilization or intensity per beneficiary will
contribute to expenditure control during the time span of the interim system. The cap would give
agencies the flexibility to provide the appropriate amount of care (duration of visits, number of
visits, and skill level of caregiver) within this limit.
To be more specific, payment to an HHA would be the lesser of: (1) the agency's actual
costs, or (2) a per visit cost limit set at 105 percent of the median national cost for free-standing
HHAS, or (3) this new agency-specific per beneficiary annual limit. This proposal can
be implemented immediately, with few administrative changes and little additional
administrative burden on home health agencies, and allow for a sensible phase-in to a
prospective payment system.
You may ask why we would continue with a cost-based reimbursement system at all in the
face of comments that a prospective payment system is preferable. First, as I've explained
earlier, we simply will not have all of the necessary ingredients for a prospective payment system
ready until October of 1999. Second, we can guarantee that the modification to the cost limit and
the introduction of a per beneficiary cap will achieve scorable savings immediately upon
implementation. We cannot make that assertion about any other system currently being
discussed.
Finally, I ask you to consider this: at a rhetorical level, it is easy for some to state that
cost-based reimbursement is inherently bad (because it provides incentives to increase costs up to
the statutory limit) and that a prospective payment system in inherently good. We need more
time to develop a prospective payment system that contains a reliable case-mix adjuster to
protect beneficiaries against cream-skimming and under-service. A good prospective payment
system is better that a cost-based system, but a cost-based system is certainly better than a poorly
designed prospective payment system without an appropriate case-mix adjuster.
In addition to our payment proposals, we have a number of proposals designed to close
existing loopholes for inappropriate billing and payments.
Eliminate PIP Payments
We propose to eliminate periodic interim payments (PIP) for HHAs simultaneous with PPS
implementation in 1999. PIP was established to encourage new providers to participate in
Medicare by improving cash flow by paying a set amount on a bi-weekly basis. However, with
about 100 new HHAs joining Medicare each month, access to home health is no longer a
problem. Further, the Office of the Inspector General has found that Medicare tends to overpay
providers who receive PIP, and has validated our contention that it is sometimes difficult to
recover these overpayments.
Payment at Location of Service
We propose to base payments on the location where services are rendered, not where
services are billed. Many HHAs are established with a parent office in an urban area and
branches in rural areas. When these HHAs bill Medicare, the payment is based on the higher
wage rate for the urban area even though the service delivery occurred in a lower-cost rural area.
Clarify the Definition or "Homebound"
We also propose to clarify the "homebound" definition by adding several calendar month
benchmarks to emphasize that home health coverage is only available to those who are truly
unable to leave the home. The current statutory definition is vague and overly broad. It allows
for considerable discretion in interpretation, and for waste, fraud, and abuse. Financial reviews
show that Medicare routinely reimburses care to beneficiaries who are not truly homebound.
Without a more concrete definition, this eligibility requirement is very difficult to enforce. The
March 1996 GAO report cites the problematic homebound definition as contributing to excessive
spending and fraud and abuse.
Provide Secretarial Authority to Make Payment Denials Based on Normative Service Standards
We also seek the authority to work with the health care community to establish normative
numbers of visits for specific conditions or situations. For example, HCFA could establish a
normative number of aide visits for a particular condition, and deny payment for those visits that
exceed this standard. Allowing the Secretary to establish more objective criteria will help HCFA
gain more control over excessive utilization. The March 1996 GAO report criticizes current
statutory coverage criteria as leaving too much room for interpretation and inviting fraud and
abuse.
Restore Post-Hospital Home Health Benefit Under Part A and Reallocate Other Home Health
Services to Part B
I know you are aware of our proposal to reallocate financing of a portion of the home
health benefit from Part A to Part B. Under our proposal, the first 100 home health visits
following a three-day hospital stay would be reimbursed under Medicare Part A. All other visits,
including those not following a hospitalization, would be reimbursed under Part B. Part B visits
would not be subject to the Part B coinsurance or deductible. The transfer would not affect the
Part B premium.
Clearly, by limiting Part A financing of the home health benefit, we would be saving the
financially vulnerable HI Trust Fund about $80 billion over 5 years. This is an important motive,
and I note that Republican members voted to achieve the same goal with a similar technique. An
unintended consequence of the OBRA 1980 change was to burden the Part A Trust Fund with
approximately 99 percent of the financing for the home health benefit, regardless of whether or
not visits are related to a hospital stay. The huge shift in financing to Part A clearly was not
consistent with the original intent of Part A, the Hospital Insurance Trust Fund, which was
designed to only finance services that centered around a hospitalization.
We deliberately excluded the impact of this Part B financing from the calculation of the
Part B premium. We are concerned about the impact that higher beneficiary out-of-pocket
expenses would have on poorer Medicare beneficiaries. Currently, Medicare beneficiaries spend
an average of $2,605 on out-of-pocket health expenditures; this accounts for 21 percent of family
income of Medicare beneficiaries. Poorer beneficiaries spend a greater proportion of their
income on out-of-pocket costs.
Comparison with Industry Proposal
We have heard some criticism about our approach of continuing cost-based payment until
we have an adequate case-mix adjuster to use in a prospective payment system. The industry has
offered an alternative proposal that moves to prospective rates sooner. Let me take this
opportunity to highlight some of our concerns about moving too quickly to a prospective
payment system which we think contains a number of flaws that could damage beneficiary
access to service and result in increased expenditures (rather than expenditure control).
One concern is that the proposal would force us to use the 18-category patient
classification system from our Phase II demonstration as a means to case-mix adjust a 120-day
episodic expenditure cap. As I described before, the demonstration's classification scheme was
designed merely to measure resource intensity changes from one year to another within an
individual agency. It was not designed nor intended to measure resource-use differences among
all home health patients and across all agencies in the country, and it would perform poorly in
this manner. Moreover, the classification scheme explains less than 10 percent of the variation in
costs -- far less than the initial DRG system for hospitals. We have research underway to
develop a case-mix measure to adjust payment rates for our PPS. The development of a
case-mix adjuster to adjust an expenditure cap would require additional research.
Some would want you to believe that it is better to implement a bad PPS system now rather
than wait for a valid and reliable system in two years from now. We are convinced that savings
cannot be guaranteed under an untested, unreliable new payment methodology that uses an
inappropriate case-mix adjacent of Beneficiaries)
Incomes <$10,000 |
43% |
30% |
85+ |
25% |
11% |
Live Alone |
33% |
26% |
Women |
68% |
57% |
2+ADLs |
32% |
10% |
Poor Health |
24% |
9% |
Over all -- Total Medicare Beneficiaries = 38 Million; with Home Health Users accounting for
about 9%.