Going down this route means we will never solve current tPA only fully working 12% of the time.
Damn I wish people would just acknowledge that everything in stroke is a fucking failure and start from scratch.
http://journals.lww.com/neurologynow/blog/WebExtras/Pages/post.aspx?PostID=47
In the August/September 2016 issue, we assess the rise of
telemedicine, particularly as it relates to stroke treatment. In this
online exclusive, we look at the FAST Act, a bill making its way through
Congress that aims to expand telestroke beyond rural hospitals.
BY EMILY BROWER AUCHARD
Only
56 telestroke programs in the United States connect to an average of
seven hospitals each—a fraction of the more than 5,600 hospitals in the
country, according to a 2012 study in Stroke. Most telestroke
programs run what's called a hub-and-spoke model, with the hub at an
urban hospital and the spokes at rural community hospitals or emergency
care facilities.
So why isn't every hospital in the country linked
to a telestroke hub? The biggest stumbling block is reimbursement and
financial viability. The American Telemedicine Association reports that
29 states have passed regulations requiring private insurers to cover
telemedicine services in the same way they cover in-person care, but
these laws vary from state to state. Differences include allowed
distance between provider and patient, authorized technologies, payment
methods, and services covered.
For public insurance, the
problem is lack of comprehensive support by Medicare, says E. Ray
Dorsey, MD, MBA, director of the Center for Human Experimental
Therapeutics at the University of Rochester Medical Center in New York.
Created in 1965 to provide care for 50 percent of elderly Americans who
had no health insurance, Medicare isn't flexible enough to keep pace
with changes and innovations in technology, he says.
How
Medicare reimburses for telestroke is critical because when Medicare
makes changes to its payment policies, the rest of the market follows.
Medicare's
current reimbursement rules allow neurologists to bill for telestroke
services when the patient is located in a rural hospital. In June 2015,
Representatives Morgan Griffith (R-VA) and Joyce Beatty (D-OH)
introduced a bipartisan bill called the Furthering Access to Stroke
Telemedicine (FAST) Act to expand Medicare coverage of telestroke to
include suburban and urban areas as well.
In a September 2015 opinion piece in The Hill, Griffith and Beatty cite a 2013 study in Telemedicine and e-Health that
showed telestroke increased the use of tPA by two- to six-fold. (Still doesn't solve the fact that tPA barely works) The
American Heart Association (AHA)/American Stroke Association estimates
that if Medicare's coverage of telestroke were extended to suburban and
urban areas, more than 22,000 additional Medicare beneficiaries would be
treated with tPA annually.
Both the AHA and the American Academy
of Neurology (AAN) are pushing Congress to act on the FAST Act. "This
bill is exactly the type of legislation Congress is looking for,
something that improves patient care and saves money. Telestroke will
reduce the need for inpatient rehabilitation and skilled nursing
services and save Medicare more than $1 billion over 10 years," says
Mike Amery, legislative counsel for the AAN. As of May 11, 2016, the
FAST Act has 89 cosponsors in the House of Representatives.
How
can consumers influence this process? "Write to your representative in
Congress," says David Tong, MD, director of California Pacific Medical
Center's telestroke program. Or go to the National Stroke Association
website, stroke.org, and look for the FAST Act Action Alert link to make your voice heard.
No comments:
Post a Comment