AAFP Joins California Academy in Supporting Residency Program Under 'Assault' by CMS
By Barbara Bein
4/1/2009
"It appears that CMS is unwilling to be satisfied with anything other than complete dismantling of this important community resource," AAFP Board Chair Jim King, M.D., of Selmer, Tenn., says in the letter, which asks Frizzera to investigate the situation.
Residency Forced to Make Changes
At that time, CMS ruled that the residency was a "new" program and, consequently, it decreased the per-resident payment from $115,000 to $70,000. The agency then proceeded to pay for Medicare services provided at the facility.
However, in 2007, CMS began an investigation based on rules that were not yet written in 1997 when the residency moved and was designated as a new program. Application of these more recent rules resulted in a decision to discontinue Medicare support for graduate medical education at the facility and to demand repayment of more than $19 million, despite the fact that "at no time has any malfeasance or misappropriation or misuse of funds by the program or hospital been claimed," according to the letter from the Academy.
The letter further notes that attempts by Tenet and Stanislaus County to collaborate with CMS in resolving the dilemma have been rebuffed, as have repeated attempts by the Stanislaus residency to negotiate on ways it could be preserved.
CMS Actions Make Bad Situation Worse
"Access to primary and preventive care and timely treatment for chronic diseases improves population health and individual outcomes … This is the care CMS is asking us to toss aside," Luther says in the release.
In the same press release, Peter Broderick, M.D., M.Ed., of Modesto, Calif., director of the Stanislaus residency program, says CMS' actions make "an already bad economic situation in our county worse."
The AAFP letter tells CMS that the loss of the residency, a major clinical resource for the area's poor and disenfranchised populations, "will undoubtedly result in increased health care costs as people are forced to use local emergency departments for care of their more advanced illnesses."
"It is ironic that now, when the Obama administration is recognizing the substantial benefits of primary care to this nation, a family medicine training program serving an economically disadvantaged area is being dismantled by the CMS agency," King says in the letter.
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