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US
Congressional Committee Slams Medicare for Harassment and Targeting of
Chiropractors
For the past
several years Medicare administrators have made doctors of chiropractic
and their patients a target for selective enforcement and regulatory restriction
under Medicare because of a medical prejudice that is a gross disservice
to both the patient and doctor of chiropractic. On May 16th, 2002, before
a packed congressional hearing room, that trend was significantly exposed
and debated.
At that hearing
Small Business Committee Chairman, The Hon. Donald Manzullo (R-IL) and
over a dozen other Members of the U.S. House of Representatives, pounded
Medicare Administrator Thomas Scully for that program's ongoing policy
of provider harassment. In a four-hour hearing, witness after witness,
including ICA's Central Regional Director Dr. Michael Hulsebus (right)
of Rockford, Illinois told the Committee how Medicare had conducted completely
unjustified and overtly hostile and prejudicial attacks, post-payment
audits and other strong-arm activities aimed at hurting non-MD providers.
Dr. Hulsebus
addressed the issue succinctly with his testimony in which he stated,
"Chiropractic providers and patients alike find it alarming when
Medicare administrators take it upon themselves to use program policies
to force health care decisions onto beneficiaries that ought to be left
to the patients themselves. How else can you characterize policies that
restrict access to one form of care, in this case chiropractic care, regardless
of the clinical realities, and force those beneficiaries onto second-choice,
specialist-based care that is far more expensive than the chiropractic
care that is being denied? This is not only offensive in terms of personal
liberties and control over one's own health care; it is also very poor
public policy."
This historic
hearing marks a major change in the role Congress is willing to play in
protecting Medicare providers and Medicare patients from the heavy handed,
arbitrary and prejudice driven operations of the Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services (CMS). Formerly known as the Health Care Financing
Administration (HCFA), the May 16th hearing was titled: "CMS, New
Name, Same Old Game?" The anger and outrage of the Committee reached
a peak when it was revealed that witnesses at earlier hearings on Medicare
harassment had been subjected to snap Medicare audits on the very day
they appeared before the Small Business Committee. Chairman Manzullo immediately
called for an investigation of what he described as intimidation and witness
tampering by Medicare and set a July 17th hearing date for a full review
of this "horrific and frightening" abuse of power by Medicare
authorities.
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