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97 Burning a Hole in Our Pockets: 12 Year Trends of Medicare Reimbursement for Burn Procedures

INTRODUCTION: Burn injuries cost the USA ~$976.6 million annually. Physician reimbursement has lagged despite years of lobbying by physician groups. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services plan to cut physician reimbursement by 4.2% in 2023. Evaluating reimbursement data for hospital-based pr...

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Autores principales: Tiongco, Rafael Felix, Atayeva, Rena, Khan, Iman, Puthumana, Joseph, Hultman, C Scott, Cooney, Carisa, Caffrey, Julie, Qiu, Cecil
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10185190/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irad045.070
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author Tiongco, Rafael Felix
Atayeva, Rena
Khan, Iman
Puthumana, Joseph
Hultman, C Scott
Cooney, Carisa
Caffrey, Julie
Qiu, Cecil
author_facet Tiongco, Rafael Felix
Atayeva, Rena
Khan, Iman
Puthumana, Joseph
Hultman, C Scott
Cooney, Carisa
Caffrey, Julie
Qiu, Cecil
author_sort Tiongco, Rafael Felix
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Burn injuries cost the USA ~$976.6 million annually. Physician reimbursement has lagged despite years of lobbying by physician groups. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services plan to cut physician reimbursement by 4.2% in 2023. Evaluating reimbursement data for hospital-based procedures is timely, including burn procedures. We hypothesized Medicare reimbursement trends for common burn procedures decreased from 2010-2022. METHODS: We obtained pricing data from the publicly-available Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Look-Up Tool for 26 Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes: “Burns–preparation of wound bed” (15002-15005), “Burns–split thickness skin graft” (15100-15101 & 15120-15121), “Burns–skin substitute” (15271-15278), “Cultured epidermal autograft” (15150-15152 & 15155-15157), and “Cell Suspension Epidermal Autograft” (15110-15111 & 15115-15116). We calculated percent differences for reimbursement; compound annual growth rate (CAGR); and percent differences for work, facility, non-facility, and malpractice relative value units (RVUs). Analysis was conducted in R 4.1.2. RESULTS: The three largest reimbursement increases were for CPT codes 15272 (24.6%), 15155 (23.7%), and 15003 (10.9%); the three largest decreases were for 15121 (-16.8%), 15120 (-6.1%), and 15275 (-5.0%). The three largest CAGR increases were for CPT codes 15272 (2.2%), 15155 (1.8%), 15274 (0.9%), and 15003 (0.9%); the three smallest were for 15121 (-1.5%), 15120 (-0.5%), and 15275 (-0.5%). Table 1 shows trends of RVUs. CONCLUSIONS: Our 12-year analysis of Medicare reimbursement trends for 26 burn procedures demonstrated an overall increase in hospital reimbursement and parallel net decrease in physician work RVUs. Reimbursements were increasingly allocated away from surgeons to facility fees and malpractice insurance. Cultured epidermal autograft to the head, neck, hands, and feet (15155) saw the largest increase in Medicare reimbursement with no change in direct physician reimbursement while split-thickness skin grafts to the head, neck, & genitals (15120 & 15121) showed decreased rates. Future work is needed to understand why these trends are occurring to advocate against physician reimbursement cuts. APPLICABILITY OF RESEARCH TO PRACTICE: Studies contributing to price transparency allow stakeholders to focus on why burn surgeons are receiving lower reimbursements.
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spelling pubmed-101851902023-05-16 97 Burning a Hole in Our Pockets: 12 Year Trends of Medicare Reimbursement for Burn Procedures Tiongco, Rafael Felix Atayeva, Rena Khan, Iman Puthumana, Joseph Hultman, C Scott Cooney, Carisa Caffrey, Julie Qiu, Cecil J Burn Care Res C-351 Correlative XIII: Fiscal and Leadership / Quality Improvement INTRODUCTION: Burn injuries cost the USA ~$976.6 million annually. Physician reimbursement has lagged despite years of lobbying by physician groups. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services plan to cut physician reimbursement by 4.2% in 2023. Evaluating reimbursement data for hospital-based procedures is timely, including burn procedures. We hypothesized Medicare reimbursement trends for common burn procedures decreased from 2010-2022. METHODS: We obtained pricing data from the publicly-available Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Look-Up Tool for 26 Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes: “Burns–preparation of wound bed” (15002-15005), “Burns–split thickness skin graft” (15100-15101 & 15120-15121), “Burns–skin substitute” (15271-15278), “Cultured epidermal autograft” (15150-15152 & 15155-15157), and “Cell Suspension Epidermal Autograft” (15110-15111 & 15115-15116). We calculated percent differences for reimbursement; compound annual growth rate (CAGR); and percent differences for work, facility, non-facility, and malpractice relative value units (RVUs). Analysis was conducted in R 4.1.2. RESULTS: The three largest reimbursement increases were for CPT codes 15272 (24.6%), 15155 (23.7%), and 15003 (10.9%); the three largest decreases were for 15121 (-16.8%), 15120 (-6.1%), and 15275 (-5.0%). The three largest CAGR increases were for CPT codes 15272 (2.2%), 15155 (1.8%), 15274 (0.9%), and 15003 (0.9%); the three smallest were for 15121 (-1.5%), 15120 (-0.5%), and 15275 (-0.5%). Table 1 shows trends of RVUs. CONCLUSIONS: Our 12-year analysis of Medicare reimbursement trends for 26 burn procedures demonstrated an overall increase in hospital reimbursement and parallel net decrease in physician work RVUs. Reimbursements were increasingly allocated away from surgeons to facility fees and malpractice insurance. Cultured epidermal autograft to the head, neck, hands, and feet (15155) saw the largest increase in Medicare reimbursement with no change in direct physician reimbursement while split-thickness skin grafts to the head, neck, & genitals (15120 & 15121) showed decreased rates. Future work is needed to understand why these trends are occurring to advocate against physician reimbursement cuts. APPLICABILITY OF RESEARCH TO PRACTICE: Studies contributing to price transparency allow stakeholders to focus on why burn surgeons are receiving lower reimbursements. Oxford University Press 2023-05-15 /pmc/articles/PMC10185190/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irad045.070 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Burn Association. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle C-351 Correlative XIII: Fiscal and Leadership / Quality Improvement
Tiongco, Rafael Felix
Atayeva, Rena
Khan, Iman
Puthumana, Joseph
Hultman, C Scott
Cooney, Carisa
Caffrey, Julie
Qiu, Cecil
97 Burning a Hole in Our Pockets: 12 Year Trends of Medicare Reimbursement for Burn Procedures
title 97 Burning a Hole in Our Pockets: 12 Year Trends of Medicare Reimbursement for Burn Procedures
title_full 97 Burning a Hole in Our Pockets: 12 Year Trends of Medicare Reimbursement for Burn Procedures
title_fullStr 97 Burning a Hole in Our Pockets: 12 Year Trends of Medicare Reimbursement for Burn Procedures
title_full_unstemmed 97 Burning a Hole in Our Pockets: 12 Year Trends of Medicare Reimbursement for Burn Procedures
title_short 97 Burning a Hole in Our Pockets: 12 Year Trends of Medicare Reimbursement for Burn Procedures
title_sort 97 burning a hole in our pockets: 12 year trends of medicare reimbursement for burn procedures
topic C-351 Correlative XIII: Fiscal and Leadership / Quality Improvement
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10185190/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irad045.070
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