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Medicare payments for physical therapy have poor prognosis

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Glenn McDonald undergoes physical therapy twice a week for a bad back. He’s already had surgery once, and treatment could help him dodge a second date with the scalpel.

“I’ve got a cage in my back,” said McDonald, 65, referring to a stabilizing metal implant in his spine. “The therapy has been more than helpful.”

McDonald’s treatments are paid for, in part, by Medicare, the nation’s health insurance for seniors.

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But because of a little-known provision in the law and Washington’s stalemate over healthcare, McDonald -- and more than half a million patients like him across the country -- may soon see an end to Medicare payments for their treatments.

That means he’ll have to pay for the sessions himself, hope other insurance picks up the tab, go to a hospital for help, or simply stop getting treatment for his back.

Medicare patients are in this fix because in 1997 Congress set a hard cap on Medicare payments for physical therapy at clinics, nursing homes and doctors’ offices -- anywhere outside a hospital.

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Congress installed the cap after learning that outpatient therapy costs were soaring at twice the growth of other Medicare services. And some therapy providers reportedly were charging exorbitant fees, further threatening the financial health of Medicare.

The cap did not apply to diagnoses such as multiple sclerosis, joint replacement and “spinal stenosis of the lumbar region” -- a seriously bad back.

Those diseases and dozens of other common maladies were automatically exempted to avoid angering hundreds of thousands of patients. Until this year. On Jan. 1, the automatic exemption process ended and the hard cap -- $1,860 in payments per year, no exceptions -- took effect.

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“You’re talking 15, maybe 20 visits that would max out that cap,” said Frank Ferrantelle, owner of Northland Physical Therapy & Rehabilitation Services in Kansas City.

Both the Senate and House versions of the healthcare overhaul legislation address the issue, but they remain in limbo. Stand-alone repeals of the therapy cap also are stuck in the legislative process.

But Congress seems likely to act on the issue, in part because of patients such as McDonald.

He pays a Medicare premium, he said, and still pays Medicare taxes. He’d like something for his money.

“If the government keeps going the way it’s going,” said the computer operator from Grandview, Mo., “I’ll never be able to retire.”

Helling writes for the Kansas City Star.

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