ACA services expand, focus on prevention [The Knoxville News-Sentinel, Tenn.]
| By Kristi L. Nelson, The Knoxville News-Sentinel, Tenn. | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
The portion of the Affordable Care Act that took effect
But this small piece of the broad, multiyear ACA also includes seven more categories of "preventive" services women can now get without a co-pay, including testing for the virus thought to cause cervical cancer, HIV tests, and consultation and certain supplies to help women successfully breast-feed.
'People are dying'
Obstetrician/gynecologist Dr.
Caudle said he's seen 10 patients recently who have cancer.
"I'm not talking about pre-cancer, I'm talking about real, invasive cancer," he said. "And their stories are disheartening. They're people who didn't get their Pap smear for 25 years because they said they couldn't afford to go to the doctor. They're people who had an abnormal Pap smear and got it treated and got no follow-up, and now this has come back, and it's invasive. ... It's going to kill them.
"People are dying because of a lack of access to health care. They will die. They die every year."
What could make a difference? Preventive care, he said, but in a busy practice, "we can't get back to preventive medicine because we're dealing with bad bleeding, bad infection, psychological and emotional situations that are almost in crisis state."
HHS tasked the
They mesh nicely with what Cherokee is already doing. Six months ago, Cherokee began a women's clinic that integrates physical and mental health, with Caudle, nurses, case workers, a psychologist and a psychiatrist practicing in the same clinic. It accepts private insurance, TennCare or the uninsured (on a sliding scale).
With that model, Caudle said, the clinic can treat, for example, drug-addicted pregnant women, or women at risk for postpartum depression. If it works as well as he expects, Caudle hopes to present the model to the
Specifics unknown
Cherokee routinely offered some services that are part of the new guidelines -- screening for domestic violence, for instance. In theory, providers can now submit that for reimbursement.
In practice, it probably won't be that simple. So far, few specifics have been passed to providers or clients about how the guidelines are to be implemented. Must domestic violence screening be administered by a master's-level counselor? Must a specific test be used?
These are questions
Yet at this point, Hedberg hasn't found clarification on which supplies are covered, in what cases. Some insurers already cover pumps if an infant is particularly small, or counseling if the lactation consultant is, like the ones at LRBWC, board-certified. Hedberg also can't find a reimbursement rate.
"There are still a lot of questions," Hedberg said, though there's no question she finds the requirements encouraging. "Other than (prenatal care), breast-feeding is really that crucial first step in prevention. We need to look at it not as lifestyle choice but as a health issue, because it saves us all money."
Like Caudle, Hedberg sees an opportunity to make sure women are healthy before they get pregnant. Though the government has recommendations for women of childbearing age, "you can't even have those discussions if the people aren't coming in the door," Hedberg said.
The trade-off for some small practices will be a longer wait for reimbursement, because they won't get immediate co-pays for those services, said LRBWC Executive Director
Other issues
Dr.
Physicians' concerns, he thinks, are largely with other provisions of the ACA, such as the
Caudle thinks some doctors will take issue with the government imposing on what services patients need -- or what physicians and other medical service personnel have time to provide.
"I think we have a shortage of providers providing true preventive medicine," he said. "It's been embraced by (ACOG), but in practice, in a busy OB/GYN practice ... you're doing deliveries, you're doing surgeries ... and it's difficult to focus on all of it."
At Cherokee, Caudle no longer delivers babies. Though he misses it.
"That's just one day out of their life," he said. "The rest of their life is more important to me."
___
(c)2012 the Knoxville News-Sentinel (Knoxville, Tenn.)
Visit the Knoxville News-Sentinel (Knoxville, Tenn.) at www.knoxnews.com
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