WASHINGTON—As legislation aimed at health care reform continues its speedy path through the House—the Ways and Means, Education and Labor and Energy and Commerce committees are expected to vote on their $1 trillion plan today—the DMEPOS competitive bidding program is also moving ahead.
 
Weekly messages from CMS and its DME MACs remind providers to get accredited, get a surety bond and get NSC files in order to prepare for the program’s Round 1 rebid.
 
But officials at Care Medical and Rehabilitation Equipment, Portland, Ore., are hoping that won’t happen. After their work with Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., on the issue, Wyden is circulating a sign-on letter to Senate colleagues addressing his concerns about the bidding program. The letter will be sent to HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.
 
“We write to you about protecting patient access to home medical equipment,” the letter states. “Stakeholders and constituents fear that the currently structured bidding program will lead to increased government waste and further compromise patients’ access to critical home care services. They warn of shortages of suppliers (increasing monopolies and fraud), closing of smaller community-based suppliers, and reducing competition, which could ultimately lead to price increases. 
 
“A possible solution may be to add an ‘any willing provider’ rule to allow any Medicare supplier to continue providing services so long as they are willing to accept the newly contracted Medicare reimbursement rates. This may better maintain the competitive nature of the industry as it is today and help postpone the closure of many domestic and often rural businesses nationwide,” Wyden writes.
 
Unless Sebelius changes the CMS competitive bidding rule, according to HME advocates, providers who don’t win contracts could be shut out of Medicare business while their patients come up against quality and access issues. In the Miami competitive bidding area in the 2008 Round 1 bid, for example, only 44 oxygen contracts were awarded although the CBA included more than 500 oxygen providers. (For more, see “IFR Clears Way for Round 1 Do-Over.”)
 
To read the Wyden letter in full, click here.
 
Waterloo, Iowa-based VGM is asking providers to ask their senators to add their names to Wyden’s letter. To sign on, senators should contact Mary Polce-Lynch in Sen. Wyden’s office at 202/224-5244 or at mary_polce-lynch@wyden.senate.gov.