Saturday, June 18, 2011

Medicare Claims Show Overuse For CT Scans

06/18/11

Attached a link http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/18/health/18radiation.html to an interesting article published in today's New York Times entitled “Medicare Claims Show Overuse for CT Scanning.”

The authors highlight that according to Medicare claims data some hospitals overuse chest CT scans and, thereby, needlessly expose patients to radiation by scanning their chests twice on the same day. The Medicare agency distributed the data to hospitals last year to show how they performed relative to each other and to encourage more efficient, safer practices. The review of that data found more than 200 hospitals that administered double scans on more than 30 percent of their Medicare outpatients — a percentage that the federal agency and radiology experts considers far too high. The national average is 5.4 percent. The figures show wide variation among states as well, from 1 percent in Massachusetts to 13 percent in Oklahoma. Overall, Medicare paid hospitals roughly $25 million for double scans in 2008. Added revenue may not be the reason dual scans are ordered. But the absence of treatment protocols may explain the variation of CT Chest use among physicians.

Possible solutions should include standardized, evidence-based diagnosis and treatment procedures according to which physicians can tailor their approach to patient care accordingly.

I hope that Medicare will open its database for researchers and health economists to help all of us to make educated and smart medical care decisions which will benefit our patients, too.


Yours

Bernd

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