ARLINGTON, Va.—According to an alert from the American Association for Homecare, the Senate Finance Committee—which has jurisdiction over Medicare—is considering further cuts to oxygen as a way to pay for health care reform.

This year alone, the association pointed out, home oxygen providers have absorbed a 27 percent cut resulting from the combined 36-month payment cap and the 9.5 percent DME cut, both of which took effect Jan. 1.

“The home oxygen benefit has already been cut to the bone. Additional cuts to oxygen will harm access to care for the millions of Americans who require medical oxygen therapy at home,” AAHomecare said.

This morning, a Wall Street Journal article detailed some effects of the 36-month cap, noting that providers are required to continue providing home oxygen services to patients two years past the cap “at a sharply reduced payment rate.”

"They're trying to have these people that furnish me oxygen do all this running out here and not get any reimbursement," an 81-year-old patient told the newspaper. "I don't think that's right."

Wayne Stanfield, president of the National Association of Independent Medical Equipment Suppliers, was also quoted in the article, noting the association is working to reverse the three-year reimbursement cap.

With health care reform moving fast, both AAHomecare and NAIMES, along with other industry groups, are urging stakeholders to contact legislators about further cuts, and to ask for some sort of relief on oxygen payments.