April 2008
National Medicare conference to address emerging issues, longstanding concerns
April 17, 2008 — The National Conference on the Future of Chiropractic in Medicare, hosted by the International Chiropractors Association (ICA) will convene April 24, in Washington, D.C., with an array of speakers and presentations.
The objectives of this day-long, Medicare forum will be to focus the attention of the chiropractic profession on this struggling but vital program, and foster a positive dialogue on how chiropractic’s Medicare role can be strengthened and Medicare patients can best be served.
ICA hopes this conference will help craft a profession-wide action plan to address the urgent need for Medicare reform, and of chiropractic’s unique and positive role in helping the nation’s seniors.
The conference will address many of the longstanding concerns and goals of the chiropractic profession, including the expansion of chiropractic services to include coverage to Medicare beneficiaries, CMS hostility and the unfair targeting of chiropractic providers for overly aggressive enforcement activities, the need to educate policymakers on the highly clinical, the cost-effective nature of chiropractic services, and the need to mobilize patients and their families to promote a much-deserved stronger role for
• The looming healthcare provider shortage in the face of 80 million Medicare beneficiaries and the opportunities it opens up for chiropractic.
• The new legislation necessary to allow doctors of chiropractic to “opt out” of the Medicare program and privately contract with beneficiaries for services, without any government role.
• The documentation demands on chiropractic Medicare providers and how this may impact future legislative initiatives.
• The new Recovery Audit Contractor (RAC) program now being tested by CMS under which independent review and collections contractors are being deployed to review Medicare claims to determine the “appropriateness” of payments to providers.
• The pilot Medicare Savings Account program and the opportunities it offers beneficiaries to take greater control of their personal health care choices and spending.
• The need for immediate Congressional action (S. 2785) to postpone the 10 percent Medicare physician fee cuts scheduled to go into effect on July 1, 2008.
Source: International Chiropractors Association, www.chiropractic.org
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