CMS Pay Cut Proposal Draws Fire

A newly proposed drug reimbursement plan from The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid (CMS) has oncology associations up in arms, whereas a well-known patient advocate and oncologist says he sees method in the payment scheme. The proposal to change Medicare Part B payment comes with a number of strategies to experiment with pricing, coinsurance elimination, and risk sharing that would be meted out in geographical samplings to see how well they perform.

The most prominent proposed changes to Medicare Part B drug reimbursement would reduce the add-on physician payment from 6% per drug to 2.5%, although a $16.80 per drug, per day payment would be added to the total.1 The plan is designed to make it less enticing for physicians to earn the highest possible payments simply by prescribing the most expensive drugs. The reduced percentage coupled with the daily fee will in many cases improve payments for lower priced drugs while lowering payments for higher priced ones (Table).

Table: Drug Payment Under Current Policy and Proposed Medicare Part B Drug Payment Model

Table: Drug Payment Under Current Policy
and Proposed Medicare Part B Drug Payment ModelOncology drugs amount to the highest category of drug spending by Medicare, yet oncology groups contend that there are a number of problems with the newly proposed payment scheme. They said they feel insulted that CMS assumes that they are prescribing drugs according to the most money they can get rather than the best interest of patients. They also said they should have been consulted during the early stages of the planning for this proposed change, and that the 60 day comment period that began March 8 isn’t a fair amount of involvement, considering how the new payment plan may affect their revenues and their practice procedures.

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