Dr. Nisreen Mesiwala will present a case from the Cornea Service at the UPMC Eye Center Grand Rounds on October 18, 2013 at 7am in BST 120. Drs. Mesiwala and Dhaliwal will lead a discussion after the case presentation. Please come prepared having read the below journal article:
- Journal Article: Medicare Cost Savings Tied to Ambulatory Surgery Centers
- Summary: As they work to reduce health care costs and extend thesolvency of programs like Medicare, policymakers willconfront tough choices in the months and years ahead.Yet, they must also be alert for reforms that cut costs whilemaintaining quality services for beneficiaries. This analysisby Professor Brent Fulton and Dr. Sue Kim of the Universityof California at Berkeley explores one possible way forpolicymakers to generate substantial Medicare savingswithout reducing services or quality of care.This study examines ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs).ASCs are technologically advanced medical facilities thatprovide same-day surgical procedures, including importantdiagnostic and preventive services like colonoscopies. Today,more than 5,300 Medicare-certified ASCs serve communitiesthroughout our nation. These ASCs perform many of thesame procedures as hospital outpatient departments(HOPDs). ASCs, however, are able to provide care much moreefficiently and without the often costly overhead associatedwith hospitals. According to an industry calculation, theMedicare program currently reimburses ASCs at 58 percent ofthe HOPD rate, meaning that Medicare—and the taxpayerswho fund it—realize savings every time a procedure isperformed in an ASC instead of an HOPD.When one considers the millions of same-day surgicalprocedures performed in ASCs through the Medicareprogram each year, the nationwide savings add up quickly.In this study, University of California at Berkeley’s ProfessorBrent Fulton and Dr. Sue Kim analyze the numbers todetermine how much ASCs save the Medicare program andits beneficiaries. They begin by analyzing government datato identify how much money ASCs saved Medicare in recentyears, and then, forecast how much more ASCs will saveMedicare in the future.