Insurers Set to Ignore Sicker, More Complex Patients Starting July 15
Newswise —
“For years,
By arbitrarily removing modified payments for complex patients, insurers are breaking with a meaningful trend in health care – that patient care be individualized. More efficient care can occur because of advanced patient preparation and planning as well as enhanced care coordination that anesthesiologists provide for the most medically complex patients. The ASA PS has been used since 1941 to classify patients’ overall health status prior to a procedure or surgery and has consistently been shown to be a predictor of anesthetic risk.
For over 80 years, anesthesiologists have used the ASA PS classification system to describe and assess a patient’s preoperative status, existing diseases and medical conditions to determine the additional resources and medical expertise needed to care for the complex patient. From the ASA PS determination, the Anesthesia Care Team uses that information to determine the specific anesthesia care plan for that patient, appropriate personnel and setting to care for the patient intraoperatively and postoperatively, and the resources needed to optimize patient outcomes.
The physical status classification system begins with a healthy, normal patient or “ASA 1.” An ASA 2 is a patient with mild systemic diseases like high blood pressure, hypothyroidism, or pregnancy. An ASA 3 is a patient with severe systemic disease like poorly controlled high blood pressure, morbid obesity, active hepatitis or with an implanted pacemaker. An ASA 4 is a patient with severe systemic disease with a constant threat to life like a stroke, significant coronary artery disease, or end-stage renal disease. An ASA 5 is a person at the point of death from severe trauma, multiple organ failure or similar diagnoses. An ASA 6 patient is one who is declared brain-dead whose organs are being removed for donor purposes.
“Insurers disregarding the needs of medically complex patients flies in the face of basic health care, in which a physician assesses a patient’s symptoms and conditions and creates a plan to treat the patient based on that assessment. One size definitely does not fit all,” said
With older and more complex patients undergoing an increasing number of surgical procedures, in both inpatient and outpatient settings, the impact of this policy change on health systems, hospitals and anesthesia practices is substantial and will affect patient access to an appropriate level of care, and limit opportunities to improve care coordination. ASA urges
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