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Are you providing the annual wellness visit in 2011? If so, try using our initial annual wellness visit (AWV) patient encounter form. The AWV form was featured as Part B News' Tool of the Month in November. All Part B News subscribers have access to these tools for free and subscribers have permission to download the form and use it at their practice.

Subscribers can download the file by going to the Tool of the Month article for November and clicking on the "Download File" link.
CMS released an updated 2011 conversion factor just days before the New Year, as the last 2010 Part B News newsletter was going to press. This left us with little time and space to write much detail about how the new conversion factor, $33.9764, will impact physician payments.

The conversion factor is just one component of the Medicare payment formula. So, you shouldn't be surprised that some payments, in particular E/M codes, increased in pay despite the 2011 conversion factor dropping 7% from the 2010 rate of $36.8729.  

CMS-855B formFor months, the deadline to get your providers up-to-date in CMS's enrollment database has been Jan. 3, 2011. Providers not in the Provider Enrollment Chain and Ownership System (PECOS) by that date will theoretically see their claims reject automatically until they get in. The real rub was that even providers who are up to date will see automatic claims rejections on claims involving orders or referrals from other provider who are not in PECOS. 

However, CMS said more recently that enforcement -- i.e., automatic claims rejections -- will not begin on Jan. 3, 2011. The agency hasn't decided when to start enforcement. That changes now, with a transmittal released Dec. 16, CMS has made its decision. The hammer comes down JULY 5, 2011 (read more about the ordering/referring rule's enforcement date) ...

Photo courtesy of NIH Image BankMedical associations want CMS to start reprocessing Medicare claims effected by retroactive geographic adjustments in 2010. Dozens of organizations sent a letter urging the agency to reprocess claims as soon as possible.

"Throughout 2010, Congress enacted short-term, stop-gap measures for durations as short as one month," the letter (pdf) states. "On three occasions, Congress failed to act in time and Medicare payments were cut by more than 20%. The payment uncertainties and delays were highly disruptive. Many practices were forced to seek loans to meet payroll expenses, lay off staff, or cancel capital improvements and investments in electronic health records and other technology."

Click here to read more on claims reprocessing

Image from co.marin.ca.govPublic opinion on the health reform law remains divided, though seniors appear to be warming to some of its measures, according to the latest tracking poll from the Kaiser Family Foundation. About 42% of all Americans have a "generally favorable view" of the law, while 41% a "generally unfavorable view," the Kaiser survey found.

Interestingly, seniors (defined as those ages 65 and up), who were initially more opposed to the law than younger people, are softening their stance. When surveyed one month after the law passed in March, 56% of seniors had an unfavorable view; the latest figure is 40%. At the same time, seniors who don't have an opinion increased from 16% to 26%, suggesting that opposition is giving away to confusion and uncertainty, according to Kaiser. Seniors who approve of the law have held steady at about 34% (read more about public opinion on health reform law) ...

 

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