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Medicare - Higher Use of Advanced Imaging Services by Providers Who Self-Refer Costing Medicare Millions (Paperback)
Loot Price: R407
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Medicare - Higher Use of Advanced Imaging Services by Providers Who Self-Refer Costing Medicare Millions (Paperback)
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Loot Price R407
Discovery Miles 4 070
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From 2004 through 2010, the number of self-referred and
non-self-referred advanced imaging services--magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) services--both
increased, with the larger increase among self-referred services.
For example, the number of self-referred MRI services increased
over this period by more than 80 percent, compared with an increase
of 12 percent for non-self-referred MRI services. Likewise, the
growth rate of expenditures for self-referred MRI and CT services
was also higher than for non-self-referred MRI and CT services.
GAO's analysis showed that providers' referrals of MRI and CT
services substantially increased the year after they began to
self-refer--that is, they purchased or leased imaging equipment, or
joined a group practice that already self-referred. Providers that
began self-referring in 2009--referred to as switchers--increased
MRI and CT referrals on average by about 67 percent in 2010
compared to 2008. In the case of MRIs, the average number of
referrals switchers made increased from 25.1 in 2008 to 42.0 in
2010. In contrast, the average number of referrals made by
providers who remained self-referrers or non-self-referrers
declined during this period. This comparison suggests that the
increase in the average number of referrals for switchers was not
due to a general increase in the use of imaging services among all
providers. GAO's examination of all providers that referred an MRI
or CT service in 2010 showed that self-referring providers referred
about two times as many of these services as providers who did not
self-refer. Differences persisted after accounting for practice
size, specialty, geography, or patient characteristics. These two
analyses suggest that financial incentives for self-referring
providers were likely a major factor driving the increase in
referrals. GAO estimates that in 2010, providers who self-referred
likely made 400,000 more referrals for advanced imaging services
than they would have if they were not self-referring. These
additional referrals cost Medicare about $109 million. To the
extent that these additional referrals were unnecessary, they pose
unacceptable risks for beneficiaries, particularly in the case of
CT services, which involve the use of ionizing radiation that has
been linked to an increased risk of developing cancer.
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