WASHINGTON--With only two days to go, industry supporters continue the fight for rescission of the interim final rule on competitive bidding. Unless the Obama administration issues an executive order or CMS takes action to pull or delay the rule, it will be implemented April 18.

A letter signed by 83 House members urging CMS to rescind the rule was sent yesterday to Health and Human Services Acting Secretary Charles Johnson, CMS Acting Administrator Charlene Frizzera and Nancy-Ann DeParle, director of the White House Office of Health Reform. Rep. Betty Sutton, D-Ohio, authored the letter, which asks CMS to “rescind the rule so that all affected parties will have the opportunity to comment on it as a proposed regulation.”

The Sutton letter said many of the changes that were recommended when Congress delayed the DMEPOS bidding program last July have not been incorporated in the IFR. There are also concerns about “the immediate elimination of thousands of eligible providers throughout the country” under competitive bidding, the letter notes. (See "Sutton Letter Urges Rescission of Bidding IFR.")

In a Tuesday letter addressed to DeParle, Populist Caucus Chairman Bruce Braley, D-Iowa, requested that the White House health reform chief rescind the rule. (The caucus rallies members of congress on middle-class economic issues such as health care, taxes and jobs.)

“I am deeply concerned that CMS has rushed implementation of this rule counter to Congress’ intent when it delayed the competitive bidding program as part of [the Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act],” Braley wrote. “Congress delayed the bid program [because] it believed CMS’ haste could lead to disastrous results for the four million beneficiaries impacted under Round One.

“In particular, we saw many examples of the serious problems the bid program caused, particularly its restriction of beneficiaries’ access to quality local providers and the initiation of home care business closures or bankruptcies across the country,” Braley said.

On Monday, the American Association for Homecare and 27 state associations sent a letter with the same request to rescind the rule to HHS, CMS and the Obama administration.

“This bidding program allows the government to selectively contract with only a small fraction of current home care providers, forcing out DME companies that provide high-quality equipment or provide critical patient services … The program will produce a bureaucratic, anti-competitive price-setting system that would be similar to a closed-model HMO and would have the effect of government-mandated consolidation in the home care sector,” the association letter said.

“This is not the solution to Medicare’s reform--and it is certainly not the answer for patients and seniors.” (Read the full text of the association letter.)

As the IFR clock continues to tick, numerous HME associations are calling on providers and other supporters to weigh in with their members of Congress about the IFR.

AAHomecare has posted talking points on the IFR and other information about competitive bidding at www.aahomecare.org.

For direct connection to members of Congress, call the U.S. Capitol switchboard at 202/224-3121.