What if the delivery van can’t get
anywhere near the patient’s home because the streets are blocked by downed
trees? What if the patient lives on the 41st floor of a building
that doesn’t have power?
HME providers along a large swath of the
East Coast have faced these and other daunting obstacles in caring for their
patients this week. Many providers have the additional difficulty of working
out of offices that are themselves flooded, wind damaged, or lacking
electricity and phone service.
In general, adversity tends to bring out
the best in all of us. HME providers are no exception. They will work to the
point of exhaustion taking care not only of their own patients, but also of
each other. They’ll coordinate with competitors to make sure that everyone who
needs help gets it. As first responders, they are a safety net for people who
need medical equipment and supplies at home.
So what big lesson has Sandy taught us? We already knew that
preparation is key and that having a back-up plan is essential. What we didn’t
know was just how fragile the safety net that we built for our patients is becoming.
And the situation will only
get worse if Medicare’s bidding program
is allowed to take full effect across the country next year. When businesses are arbitrarily blocked from serving patients, the result
is widespread tears in that safety net.
The net, though tattered, is holding
together for now. Eventually, however, there will be enough holes that someone
will fall through.
Even if Congress is able to ignore the
job losses and the increased hospitalization and nursing home costs caused by
the bidding program, can they ignore the danger to patients? Does someone
actually have to die to get their attention?
If you haven’t yet, call or email your
member of Congress today. Ask them to cosponsor H.R. 6490, the Medicare
DMEPOS Market Pricing Program Act of 2012. This is
a sustainable alternative to the current bidding program: it saves the same money,
but without eroding access to cost-effective home-based equipment and
care.
Take just five minutes out of your day
and use the AAHomecare Take Action
Center. If you have questions, helpful resources explaining the bill and
the Market Pricing Program can be found here.