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    Medicare puzzle: Big rise in artificial feet costs

    Medicare puzzle: Fewer amputations, but bill for artificial feet rises nearly 60 percent

    Fantasy Finance

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- What's wrong with this picture? Medicare's bill for artificial feet rose nearly 60 percent in recent years, although foot and leg amputations due to diabetes continued a dramatic decline.

    Medicare paid $94 million for artificial feet in 2010, according to research conducted for The Associated Press. That was nearly $35 million more than in 2005, even though in 2010, Medicare covered about 1,900 fewer such prostheses.

    Artificial feet represent a tiny slice of the $550 billion program that covers health care for 49 million older and disabled people. But the spending spike highlights basic questions about affordability, technology and appropriate care that confront Medicare as lawmakers look for a way out of its broader financial troubles.

    Industry says there's nothing wrong. Patients are benefiting from new technology in artificial limbs used for wounded troops returning from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

    Others dispute that conclusion, saying there's no body of scientific evidence to back it up.

    A doctor who works with amputees questioned whether a high-tech foot designed for an active person is appropriate for an elderly patient with diabetes, a major cause of lower-limb amputations. Losing a foot means the patient is at an advanced stage of the disease and probably dealing with other problems that limit physical activity.

    "A lot of our patients are just trying to transfer from the wheelchair to the toilet," said Dr. Howard Gilmer of National Rehabilitation Hospital in Washington.

    A report last year by the Health and Human Services inspector general found widespread questionable billing for lower-limb prostheses, a category that includes artificial feet.

    In 2009, Medicare inappropriately paid $43 million for lower-limb prostheses that did not meet certain basic standards for accurate claims, investigators said. They found an additional $61 million in questionable billing in cases where it wasn't clear that the Medicare beneficiary had seen the referring doctor in the previous five years, raising questions about whether the prosthesis was medically necessary.

    Industry officials say they are committed to battling fraud and the AP's statistics simply show the march of progress.

    "We have had a huge improvement in the quality of devices that we can provide, thanks to all the knowledge that has flowed from providing care to soldiers," said Thomas Fise, executive director of the American Orthotic & Prosthetic Association, a trade group. "That technology has now become available, and patients believe they should be entitled to it, and who is going to tell those Medicare beneficiaries they are not entitled?"

    "What the government got for their money was value-added," said Tom DiBello, president of the group, which represents professionals who fit artificial limbs as well as manufacturers.

    The AP's analysis was done by Avalere Health, a data-crunching firm serving private and government health care clients. It looked at Medicare spending on 13 codes for different types of artificial feet that the program covers, many with multiple manufacturers. The analysis suggests the sharp rise in spending is mainly due to a shift in the types of prosthetics being given to Medicare beneficiaries, from ones that cost several hundred dollars to more sophisticated types that run in the low thousands.

    Medicare has started covering a computer-controlled ankle/foot that costs $15,000, about as much as a compact car. Some major private insurers still consider it experimental and do not routinely cover it.

    Several doctors were surprised by the findings.

    "The data are surprising because of the large increase over a short period of time," said Dr. David Armstrong, a professor of surgery at the University of Arizona and diabetes expert who directs the Southern Arizona Limb Salvage Alliance.

    Armstrong wonders if the dazzle of technology is the issue for some practitioners. "They can lose the forest for the trees and focus more on a high-end device because it's high-end, rather than specifically on function for the patient," he said

    The AP's data analysis showed a nearly threefold increase in Medicare coverage for one model of foot prosthesis that features a shock absorber and costs about $6,500.

    That seemed puzzling to Gilmer. His clinic had recently fitted a patient with that same kind of foot. But the patient is in his 20s and rides ATVs, plays basketball and works on cars.

    "Most of our Medicare patients are not going out playing hoops every day," said Gilmer. Fitting a patient is an individualized process that takes into account many factors, not only physical activity.

    Avalere senior vice president Nora Hoban said the data raise questions that need to be answered by further research.

    Medicare spokesman Brian Cook said officials are concerned.

    Medicare "is aware of and shares the concerns this research raises about lower limb prosthetics," he said in a statement. The agency has saved taxpayers $867,000 in the past year by cracking down on fraud involving artificial limbs, Cook added.

    Medicare said it was unable to provide information to the AP about the ages of beneficiaries who received the different types of artificial feet or the states where they live. Those two pieces of information could help start to find answers to the puzzle.

    Medicare officials acknowledge widespread deficiencies in documentation of medical necessity for all kinds of equipment, but they are concerned that tightening requirements could restrict access for seniors.

    "We are committed to reducing improper payments and fraud, while ensuring that Medicare beneficiaries have access to the care and services that they need," said Cook.

    The inspector general's report recommended that Medicare revise a scale of functional activity levels that clinicians use to help determine what kind of artificial limb is appropriate for a particular patient, based on that individual's lifestyle. It said definitions of the patient's potential for rehabilitation should be clarified.

    "These changes would help ensure that prostheses are matched to beneficiaries' needs and that (Medicare billing contractors) can assess the medical necessity of these devices," the report said.

    Meanwhile, the rate of diabetes-related foot and leg amputations continues to fall, due to better patient care. Among the Medicare population, it declined 66 percent from 1996-2008, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    ___

    Online:

    Avalere research: http://tinyurl.com/84g23lm

    Medicare: http://www.medicare.gov

    Health and Human Services inspector general's report: http://tinyurl.com/7pj4g9s

    American Orthotic & Prosthetic Association: http://www.aopanet.org

     

    17 comments

    • Smitty  •  Wuhan, China  •  3 months ago
      Senior citizens work hard to retire. If we want to save money, how about cutting politicians pay. Why are there no articles about that?
    • Alfredo deLorenzo  •  Norfolk, Virginia  •  3 months ago
      As a senior with aching feet I can appreciate amputees needing an artificial limb, but a bionic $10,000 foot on a broke down body seems a bit much. I am diabetic and hope I won't have to have an amputation but just something I can get around on would suffice. I always admired the old wooden peg legs pirates used.
    • hh  •  3 months ago
      send them to the death panels
    • Richard  •  3 months ago
      Medical stuff is getting out of hand. I needed a soft boot type cast for a sprained foot and had to have a perscription to buy one. Was told I could only get one at a drug store. Then I found them on Ebay. They were the same and a lot cheaper and no script required. Go figgure.
    • fixgvt  •  3 months ago
      Crooks stopped stealing from banks and make fortunes in medicare fraud. Just shuffle some paper work and grab the millions that hit your mailbox.
      Notice the medicare info.. we dont know what state, we dont know their age, we just send money because we got a bill. Our gvt at work.
    • scott h  •  Dallas, Texas  •  3 months ago
      How about a wood peg. That should meet the cost criteria.
    • Paul Reihs  •  Reno, Nevada  •  3 months ago
      Prosthetics Are more expensive because the technology has increased dramatically. Though They should have some sort of criteria based on the age, fitness, and level of activity. not every amputee is going to need a $15,000 prosthetic. But those of you who think a wooden peg leg is good enough for amputees. let's remove one or both your legs and you can find out if you would be comfortable with the peg leg. Don't judge the need of other's until you're in their shoes. Ha! No pun intended. Any kind of fraud should be punished. Whether it be by the provider or the patient.
    • me  •  Richardson, Texas  •  3 months ago
      Shut down the Fed............. Ron Paul 2012!!!!!!!!!
    • Deepsix  •  Norwalk, Connecticut  •  3 months ago
      Everything in life is now declared by Obama to now be a "basic right" Entitlement Nation will die a firey death ! Responsibility, thrift, accountability for ones future welfare is but a distant memory of once great American value system.
      • AWolf 3 months ago
        You are so full of caca!
    • KIP  •  Lafayette, Louisiana  •  3 months ago
      Bloated, inefficient, bureacratic, govt program overspends for prosthetics? Nawh, say it ain't so. Damned, without that little evil word (profit motive), we just can't see how this could happen. Lets get wasteful bureaucrats to controll more health care (Obamacare), shall we?
    • WilhemenaCooker  •  Intercourse, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
      Ricky Ricardo Leftist AP writer cannot fathom how the market works - fewer product sold, higher costs
      • JFerristx 3 months ago
        Obviously, neither can you. The basic model has not changed, going from a few hundred dollars to over 15K is NOT a market factor.
    • vote2012  •  3 months ago
      Wait untill Obama care kicks in. No pun intended.
    • William  •  3 months ago
      Greed plain and simple fueld by lower tax rates on the top 1%
    • Joe  •  3 months ago
      As we all know, the REAL welfare queens are defense contractors, farmers, oil companies, the military, and Republicans in general, most of whom owe their so-called "success" to government largess. As a liberal, I say cut these parasites off and restore fiscal sanity to this nation.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Norfolk, Virginia  •  3 months ago
      The fact of the matter is there is a specific criteria for the level of foot that an amputee receives and it is true that a high tech foot provides no advantages to those who cannot
      run and in fact may hinder them because of extra weight. While these new high tech feet are good for high performance candidates it is illegal, wrong and costing Medicare extra money because people are putting the expensive high performance feet on people for whom they are not designed for. The reason for this is that a professional in this field can make approx$100 off of a $200 foot and $2,000 off of a $4,000 foot. There are unethical professionals who are intentionally cheating the system. Surprise surprise.
      • AWolf 3 months ago
        And kick backs to the docs who use the expensive products, maybe? ;-)
    • mysaug  •  3 months ago
      the elderly are really starting tb be a burden. Sorry mom.
    • me  •  Richardson, Texas  •  3 months ago
      Wall St's continued greed and avarice has manipulated oil up to $100 a barrel. This is an enormous threat to the world’s economy! If you don't know it; listen up! Oil refineries all over the world are shutting down! Refineries in Hawaii, St Croix, Houston, Philly, Delaware, other places in the US, and Europe are shutting down! They’re shutting down for three reasons (1) The price of oil is too high. A refiner’s margins are so small at these high prices, not only can they not make money, most refineries have lost money. (Thanks speculators on Wall St!) (2) There is a glut of oil and distillates and no place left to store it. It’s been this way for a while (3 years). Some refineries are turning into oil storage facilities. They can make more money from renting tanks to banks and hedge funds than they can make by producing product. (3) Due to the European oil embargo on Iran, Iran is selling oil at a heavily discounted rate to Asian refineries who will sell refined products to us cheaper than American refineries. Bottom line; WE ARE SO SCREWED!!! If we aren’t drawn in to a war with Iran that affects the Strait of Hormuz , the bottleneck that much of the worlds oil has to pass through, then we’ll be affected by the refineries shutting down. Eventually, as our economies improve there will be terrible shortages of product. It takes time for refineries to come back on line. Expect shortages to skyrocket oil and distillates to the sky. Repeal the Commodities Modernization Act of 2000 and the Financial Modernization Act of 1999 and get speculators out of the Commodities markets!!! Ron Paul for action in 2012!!!!

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