Page 6 - HME Business, September 2017
P. 6

Editor’s Note
Wielding the Numbers
Recent data seems worrying, but offers answers.
Volume 24 Number 9 September 2017
It’s often said that the devil is in the details. Meaning, if you don’t pay attention to the finer points of an endeavor, you can undermine your whole effort. But God’s in the details, as well. A seemingly horrifying or overwhelming problem might offer its own solution on closer inspection.
I think both those truisms are especially impor- tant to keep in mind when looking at some recently released figures on the industry, particularly data on the population of HME provider businesses. Moreover, other data might become useful tools providers can employ to protect their businesses, industry and patients.
But before I come at this column from any more of an oblique angle than I already have, let’s approach these numbers head on, put them through their paces, and see if we can’t find some larger truths.
Decline in Providers
If there’s one piece of recent news that initially sent me into Chicken Little mode, it was the analysis performed by the American Association for Homecare on the quarterly Medicare Supplier Directory. AAHomecare does that to determine the number of HME providers currently providing services to beneficiaries. This includes providers of major categories, such as beds, NPWT, support surfaces, wheelchairs, and oxygen products. The association calculated 6,086 unique suppliers located at 9,810 locations nationally. When that’s compared to the 2013 population, the population of unique suppliers has slipped by a whopping 42 percent — in just four years!
Decline in Medicare Claims
A report from the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC), June 2017 Data Book: Health Care Spending and the Medicare Program, recently showed that Medicare reimbursement pays for just 16 percent of all spending on home medical equip- ment. The report also shows that DME’s portion of Medicare expenditures is shrinking. In 2005, DME comprised 2 percent of Medicare spending, but in 2015, it only accounted for 1 percent of Medicare outlays. In addition to Medicare’s 16 percent
share, Medicaid accounted for 15 percent of HME spending, and all other sources, such as private payer and retail sales, represented 68 percent of HME spending.
You can look at these numbers a few ways. You can conclude that providers are shuttering left and right, or you can conclude that everyone is
Editor Products Editor
Publication Design Production Coordinator
Director of Online Product Development
Group Publisher
Integrated Media Consultant
David Kopf
(949) 265-1561
Sydny Shepard
Wendy Byle, Byle Design Charles Johnson
Marlin Mowatt Karen Cavallo
(760) 610-0800 Caroline Stover (323) 605-4398
abandoning Medicare. I think the truth lies some- where in between.
I have no doubt that competitive bidding is having a crushing impact on providers and patients alike. We know this. We’ve seen it in
our daily lives. But MedPAC’s numbers also clearly demonstrate that there is a shift in non CMS-derived revenue. Whether it is private
payer insurance or it is retail sales, or some other arrangement (such as institutional supply), we can clearly see that DME/HME providers have been diversifying their businesses like mad.
Now we’re seeing traditionally funded busi- nesses are becoming retail businesses. A great example of that is retail power mobility provider Mobül: The Mobility Store, whose founder and president, Wayne Slavitt, gives some solid advice on retail power on page 26. He’s a great example of how some providers can not only diversify, but leave Medicare in their dust.
But of course Medicare is a fact of life for most providers, and bearing that in mind, we are also seeing efforts to create the kinds of data they can wield to protect the funded elements of their busi- ness. The Audit Key program just finished taking data for its second quarter effort. That informa- tion is not only used to help providers see how their audit experiences stack up against industry averages, but to lobby congress for reforms to an out-of-control audit program.
Also, The American Association for Homecare has contracted healthcare research group Dobson DaVanzo & Associates to help carry out a major study will collect perspectives from HME providers, Medicare beneficiaries, caregivers and hospital discharge planners and staff on how competitive bidding has impacted access to HME. The study is a response to regulatory policymakers and members of congress who have noted that information on Medicare beneficiary access to HME is critical to improving the bidding program and securing relief for rural providers.
(To participate, contact Ashley Plauche, AAHomecare’s manager of government affairs, at ashleyp@aahomecare.org.) Those are the kind of numbers that will change policy.
David Kopf Editor
HME Business
EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD
Steve Ackerman
President Spectrum Medical
Jeffrey S. Baird, Esq.
Chairman of the Health Care Group of Brown & Fortunato, P.C.
Rob Baumhover
Director of Retail Services for VGM Retail Services
Ty Bello, RCC
President and Founder Team@Work
Georgie Blackburn
Vice President, Government Relations and Legislative Affairs BLACKBURN’S
Todd Blockinger
Senior Director of Sales The MED Group
Rob Boyeye
Executive Vice President of HME Brightree LLC
Sandra Canally
President
The Compliance Team Inc.
George Coppola
Director of Marketing CAIRE Medical
John C Eberhart
President Eberhart Home Health Inc.
John Letizia
President of Laurel Medical Supplies Inc.
Joe Lewarski
Vice President of Global Respiratory and Sleep Drive Devilbiss
Ron Resnick
President Blue Chip Medical Products Inc.
Tom Ryan
President and CEO AAHomecare
Wayne Slavitt
Founder and CEO Mobül: The Mobility Store
Wayne van Halem
President and Founder The van Halem Group LLC
INFRASTRUCTURE SOLUTIONS GROUP
President & Group Publisher Group Publisher Group Circulation Director Group Marketing Director Group Social Media Editor
Chief Executive Officer Chief Operating Officer Chief Technology Officer
Executive Vice President Executive Chairman
REACHING THE STAFF
Kevin O’Grady Karen Cavallo Irene Fincher Susan May Matt Holden
Rajeev Kapur Henry Allain Erik A. Lindgren
Michael J. Valenti Jeffrey S. Klein
Editors can be reached via e-mail, fax, telephone, or mail. A list of editors and contact information is at www.hme-business.com.
Email: email is routed to individuals’ desktops. Please use the following form: firstnameinitial,lastname@1105media.com. Do not include a middle name or middle initials.
Telephone: The switchboard is open weekdays 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. After 5:30 p.m. you will be directed to individual extensions.
Dallas Office: 14901 Quorum Drive, Suite 425, Dallas, TX 75254 (972) 687-6700; Fax: (972) 687-6799; www.1105media.com
Corporate Phone: (818) 814-5200; Fax: (818) 734-1522
6 HMEBusiness | September 2017 | hme-business.com
Management Solutions | Technology | Products


































































































   4   5   6   7   8