Pages

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Medicare To Pay For Obesity Counseling.

USA Today Share to FacebookShare to Twitter (11/30, Kennedy, Hellmich) reports that yesterday, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) announced Share to FacebookShare to Twitter (pdf) that Medicare "will pay for screenings and preventive services to help recipients curb obesity and the medical ailments associated with it, primarily heart disease, strokes and diabetes." Specifically, the new "benefits will include face-to-face counseling every week for one month, then one counseling appointment every other week for the following five months for people who screen positive for obesity."
        "Those who lose at least 6.6 pounds during the first six months will be eligible for once-a-month visits for another six months," CQ Share to FacebookShare to Twitter (11/30, Subscription Publication) reports. "The obesity service will be added to other preventive services offered without cost sharing under the health care law."
        Reuters Share to FacebookShare to Twitter (11/30, Berkrot) quotes CMS Administrator Donald Berwick, MD, who said, "Prevention is crucial for the management and elimination of obesity in our country."
        According to MedPage Today Share to FacebookShare to Twitter (11/30, Gever), "CMS, which first floated the obesity coverage plan last September, said it expects more than 30% of the Medicare population to qualify for the new benefit." However, "counseling must take place in a primary care setting such as a physician's office. It will not be covered when provided in skilled nursing facilities, hospitals, emergency departments, outpatient surgery centers, or hospices."


Benefits Of Medicare Anti-Obesity Initiative Debated.


In continuing coverage, USA Today Share to FacebookShare to Twitter (12/1, Hellmich, Kennedy) reports, "The decision that Medicare will pay for screening and counseling services to help obese patients lose weight has opened an old debate about who can best help people slim down." While "top national weight-loss experts salute the ruling as good news...they are concerned that many doctors and their staffs are ill prepared and haven't the time to help obese patients." Thomas Wadden, director of the Center for Weight and Eating Disorders at the University of Pennsylvania's Perelman School of Medicine, "believes that CMS should consider reimbursing a range of weight-loss options, including telephone- and Internet-based programs, which have been shown to be effective."

No comments:

Post a Comment