DiagnosticImaging Members: Login | Register
Diagnostic Imaging Recommended Medical Sites Medline Drugs

Powered by SearchMedica

 
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Conference Reports
  • Case Studies
  • Jobs
  • Product Directory
  • Voice Recognition
  • Low Dose
  • RSNA 2011
  • PET-MR

Home » Daily News

Diagnostic Imaging.
 

Survey challenges recommended use rate for imaging reimbursement

By H.A. Abella | June 18, 2009

The Radiology Business Management Association has called into question a recommendation to increase the assumed utilization rate from 50% to 90% for the relative value unit scale used to calculate outpatient Medicare payment rates for high-tech imaging procedures. A survey conducted by the association challenges findings from an earlier survey that informed the recommendation by the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission.

The RBMA study of 261 imaging machines in 46 centers found that imaging equipment in rural areas is used 48% of the time, whereas the utilization rate for urban areas falls well under 60%. The data suggest that the utilization rate assumed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is similar to the actual rate at which imaging equipment operates. CMS assumes a utilization rate of 25 hours per week, or 50%, to calculate the reimbursement for the technical portion of imaging services.

In its annual report to Congress in March, MedPAC recommended raising the assumed weekly utilization rate to 45 hours, or 90%, for diagnostic imaging equipment costing more than $1 million. MedPAC's recommendation was based on its own survey of 133 facilities in six urban regions that found the median hours of use for CT and MRI were 40 and 46, respectively. The Obama administration has since asked Congress to adopt a 95% utilization assumption.

For more on this topic:
Senate discusses possible imaging payment cuts.

Alliance challenges plans to regulate medical imaging.

New payment formula proposes Medicare cuts for high-tech imaging.

MedPac is an independent congressional agency composed of a 17-member citizen appointee panel and a professional staff that advises Congress about Medicare practices and policy.

Increasing the imaging utilization rate to significantly higher levels than actual use could lead to reimbursement cuts that will impair access to imaging services and cause patients to delay or forgo necessary imaging procedures, according to the Alliance for Medical Imaging Coalition. In a written statement, the organization argued that these cuts may have devastating consequences for patients in rural areas.

"Spending on advanced imaging has decreased significantly since 2005, and imaging use has essentially flattened," said AMIC executive director Tim Trysla. "Any further deep imaging reimbursement cuts will severely disrupt patients' access to diagnostic services."

RBMA figures are more accurate than those proposed by Congress and the Obama administration and mirror actual imaging equipment utilization rates in both urban and rural practices, said RBMA executive director Michael Mabry.

"Since MedPAC's utilization rate survey was based on only six urban regions, we understand policymakers' need to continuously collect accurate use rate data to inform their reimbursement decisions. RBMA is committed to collecting and providing those data on an ongoing basis," he said.

AMIC officials state that MedPAC's 90% utilization rate is based on "deeply flawed" data collected before the enactment of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 and that it does not consider the impact on rural providers. The group has criticized MedPAC's 2006 survey as not truly representative of imaging utilization practices across the nation. AMIC officials also noted that MedPAC itself cautioned against using its survey to determine equipment use rates.

In defense of MedPAC's recommendation, a source familiar with its deliberations noted two independent data sources that indicate that MR and CT utilization rates are in the 80% to 90% range.

The RBMA findings point to inherent problems with the reimbursement rates for imaging systems, according to the source. Speaking on background, he said a higher assumed use rate is justified to cut reimbursement, if the scanners can be operated profitably despite sitting idle half the time. Higher assumed use rates are considered good public policy because they wring inefficiencies out of the market.

 

Join the Conversation

Want to join the conversation? Just sign in or register today to become part of our growing, online community.






TopicIndex

 

ACOs
Cardiac
Case Studies
Colonography
CT
Digital X-ray
Direct Radiography
Elastography
Low-Dose Modalities
Meaningful Use
Molecular Imaging
MRI
 

 

Nuclear
PACS
PET/CT
PET/MR
Practice Management
RIS
Teleradiology
Ultrasound Imaging
Vendors
Voice Recognition
Women's Imaging
All Topics
 


SponsoredResources


OptumInsight
Acadiana Computer Systems, Inc. gains a 100% ROI on their radiology billing


Key Equipment Finance
Michiana Hematology Oncology Success Story


Barco
Multi-modality breast imaging using RapidFrame™ technology


Siemens
3D Ultrasound of the Breast


Ziosoft, Inc.
PhyZiodynamic Solutions: Applying Supercomputing to Patient Care


Siemens
Easy Guide to Low Dose


Medrad
Improving Clinical Outcomes and Workflow
Toshiba America Medical Systems
Minimizing dose, sedation in pediatric CT

 

View All

 


  • On This Site
  • Most Emailed
  • On This Topic

MostPopular

  • Whole-breast ultrasound brings significant screening benefits

    JAN 15 2010 DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING ASIA PACIFIC READ >>

  • CNN Investigation Targets Radiology Board Exam Cheating

    JAN 13 2012 READ >>

  • As teleradiology evolves, it changes dramatically, plays growing role in practice

    DEC 15 2010 DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING READ >>

  • Delayed side effects persist in IV iodinated contrast media

    MAY 28 2009 DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING EUROPE READ >>

  • Mucinous Adenocarcinoma of Stomach

    JAN 9 2012 READ >>

MostPopular

  • CNN Investigation Targets Radiology Board Exam Cheating

    JAN 13 2012 READ >>

  • Telemammography Taking Hold

    JAN 24 2012 READ >>

  • Riverain’s Chest X-Ray Comparison Tool Gets FDA Nod

    JAN 11 2012 READ >>

  • Podcast: Implementing a Hybrid PET/MR System

    JAN 30 2012 READ >>

  • Taking Medical Image Sharing to the Cloud

    JAN 19 2012 READ >>

MostPopular

  • CNN Investigation Targets Radiology Board Exam Cheating

    JAN 13 2012 READ >>

  • Radiology Comic: Doctors Cheating

    JAN 31 2012 READ >>

  • CNN Look at Radiology Exam "Cheating" Misses the Mark

    JAN 24 2012 READ >>

  • Columbus Radiology Launches Imaging Ordering App

    JAN 19 2012 READ >>

  • Radiology Comic: MRI de Cabeza

    JAN 4 2012 READ >>



CancerNetwork | CME LLC | ConsultantLive | Diagnostic Imaging | Musculoskeletal Network | OBGYN.net | PediatricsConsultantLive |
Physicians Practice | Psychiatric Times | SearchMedica | Medical Resources

© 1996 - 2012 UBM Medica LLC, a UBM company
Privacy Statement - Terms of Service - Advertising Information - Editorial Policy Statement - UBM Medica Network Privacy Policy