Suppliers brainstorm for Operation Wheeler Dealer relief.
If beleaguered wheelchair suppliers get their way, a 100-percent preapproval process could be the cure for Operation Wheeler Dealer ills.
Measures stemming from the feds' crackdown on Medicare wheelchair fraud are killing legitimate suppliers, warned numerous participants in the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services special listening session on the matter March 3. New restrictions on coverage policy and months of wheelchair claims holdups are cutting suppliers off at the knees, and preventing eligible beneficiaries from receiving their chairs on time or altogether, suppliers said.
Suppliers want CMS and the durable medical equipment regional carriers to rescind the so-called "clarification" to the wheelchair coverage policy issued in December. The policy is poorly structured and has no impact on wheelchair fraud and abuse, just on legit providers, attorney Cara Bachenheimer with Elyria, OH-based Invacare Corp. noted in the forum that attracted nearly 400 participants.
Beneficiary advocate Henry Claypool also called for the policy's rescindment. The change is "penny wise and pound foolish" as it pushes costs from the DME benefit to institutional, rehab and physician services after injuries and falls without proper equipment, Claypool argued.
As an alternative to the coverage change and other harsh Wheeler Dealer policies, DME suppliers offered these suggestions for preventing wheelchair fraud and abuse:
The time DMERCs spend scrutinizing "consumer" chairs could be much less than for rehab chairs, said Scott Scobey of Beaufort SC-based Low Country Mobility.
Tying codes for certain power wheelchairs to ICD-9 diagnosis codes that allow patients to qualify for the chairs would be helpful, suggested Laura Mitchell, owner of Carol Stream, IL-based Chicagoland Accessibility.
Make any prior authorizations final, Scobey said. Suppliers should be able to submit their paperwork, and Medicare can decide whether "to cover it or not," Scobey told CMS.