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SGR Formula Effect

SGR Formula Effect. Prepared by: Lisa Patrick, MD Mount Sinai School of Medicine. What is the SGR?. The Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) was implemented in 2003 to control Medicare spending on physician services. Objectives. Define the equation Examine the problem Discuss the impact.

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SGR Formula Effect

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  1. SGR Formula Effect Prepared by: Lisa Patrick, MD Mount Sinai School of Medicine

  2. What is the SGR? • The Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) was implemented in 2003 to control Medicare spending on physician services

  3. Objectives • Define the equation • Examine the problem • Discuss the impact

  4. How Medicare Pays Physicians • Each • Patient Encounter • Procedure • Is assigned a relative value unit (RVU)

  5. Relative value units (RVUs) • Relative value assigned to services • Orthopedic procedures > chest tube > incision & drainage > laceration > lumbar puncture

  6. Who assigns a service its RVU? • Resource-Based Relative Value Scale Updates Committee (RUC) • Includes two emergency physicians • Designates an RVU to each billing code

  7. How are RVU’s assigned? • Three Variables • Work = value of physician’s work • PE = value of non-physician clinical labor expenses • MP = amount of medical liability for the service

  8. More Factors • Geographic Adjustment (GPCI) • Conversion Factor (CF) • In 2008, CF = $38.0869

  9. The Whole Equation • [(Work RVU x Budget neutrality adjustor (0.8806)* x Work GPCI) + (PE RVU x PE GPCI) + (MP RVU x MP GPCI)] x CF

  10. Who assigns the conversion factor? • Calculated annually by the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) • SGR as target

  11. SGR: Four Variables • Fees for physicians’ services, • Number of Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries, • Gross domestic product (GDP) per capita, and • Expenditures due to changes in law or regulations

  12. The Problem • Physician reimbursement by Medicare is tied to the GDP • But GDP is NOT tied to the cost of running a practice

  13. The Problem • Physician costs keep rising • While the Gross Domestic Product falls with recessions and does not track costs

  14. The Problem • Congress must act annually to override payment cuts dictated by the SGR

  15. The Problem • Annual threatened cuts harm practices • Delays upgrades / capital purchases • Reduces accepting providers • Requires large lobbying efforts

  16. Where do we go from here?

  17. The Problem Revisited • The SGR takes into account GDP and NOT actual physician costs • As the GDP decreases, conversion factor decreases, which reduces physician reimbursement • Congress must act annually to override

  18. Future impact • Payment rates to fall 41% over the next nine years* • The cost of a practice is expected to increase by nearly 20 percent* • *2007 Medicare Trustees Report

  19. Future impact • 25% of Medicare patients looking for a new physician had difficulty finding one* • *2005 Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) survey • 67% of physicians say they will decrease or stop seeing new Medicare patients if the scheduled eight years of cuts under the SGR take place** • **2006 AMA Member Connect Survey

  20. Conclusion • Necessity for long-term solution • Overcome perception of problem: “too difficult to solve”

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