Medicare Restriction of Telehealth Speech Services Negatively Impacts Patient Care.

Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg

Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, University of California-San Francisco Voice and Swallowing Center, San Francisco, California, USA.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Medicare's temporary discontinuation of teletherapy reimbursement led to significant cancellations (28%) among affected patients, primarily due to distance from in-person facilities.
  • A study of 53 patients revealed that those who canceled lived significantly farther away from the care location compared to those who rescheduled their appointments.
  • After reversing the decision, access to therapy appointments improved, but it still highlighted ongoing challenges in care continuity for Medicare patients with voice and swallowing disorders.

Article Abstract

Objective: Ample literature shows voice and swallowing therapy, in-person or virtual, to be essential for Otolaryngology and Speech-Language Pathology care. In March 2023, Medicare announced discontinuing teletherapy reimbursement in hospital-based outpatient departments, effective May 2023. This decision was subsequently reversed; however, the uncertain interval period provided the opportunity to study the impact of eliminating teletherapy.

Study Design: Prospective cohort.

Setting: Tertiary laryngology center.

Methods: Affected Medicare patients were contacted via mailed letter, phone, and secure patient portal and offered to change appointments to in-person, teletherapy with cash self-payment ($165-282/session) or cancellation. Demographics and responses were collected. Statistical analyses conducted using Student's t test.

Results: Fifty-three patients (28 female; mean age 66.8 ± 14.2 years) were impacted. 64% (n = 34) changed to in-person appointment, 28% (n = 15) canceled, 8% (n = 4) did not respond. No patients opted to self-pay. 67% of patients that canceled telehealth care cited distance from in-person care location. The mean distance for canceled versus rescheduled patients was 92.3 ± 93.0 versus 32.8 ± 57.4 miles, P = .034. Mean age, gender, and number of sessions were not different between groups. Mean time to third next available therapy appointment was 96 ± 46 versus 46 ± 12 days before and after rule change, P = .007. Upon Medicare's reversal, this trend rebounded to nearly baseline (mean 77 ± 12 days, P = .12).

Conclusion: Medicare's discontinuation of reimbursement for teletherapy services caused nearly 30% of patients to cancel voice and swallowing therapy, primarily due to distance. These cancellations led to decreased access to care for Medicare patients with voice/swallowing diagnoses, which affect function, quality of life, and potentially even mortality risk.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ohn.779DOI Listing

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