House Energy and Commerce Chair, Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.).


April 23, 2010 - House Energy and Commerce Chair, Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.), Ways and Means Committee Chair, Rep. Sandy Levin (D-Mich.), and Ways and Means Subcommittee on Health Chair, Rep. Pete Stark (D-Calif.), recently called on the General Accountability Office (GAO) to perform a study regarding the effects of physician self-referral of advanced medical imaging and radiation therapy treatments on Medicare spending.

Congressman acted at the request of the American College of Radiology (ACR), which issued a public statement on April 22, underscoring the problem with self-referrals. The college noted, "previous GAO reports as well as peer-reviewed studies published in the Journal of the American Medical Association and elsewhere have shown that when physicians refer patients to imaging facilities in which they have a financial interest, a process known as self-referral, utilization is significantly increased."

According to a number of private insurance studies, as much as half of self-referred imaging is unnecessary. The National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurement (NCRP) has cited self-referral as a primary, preventable driver of a six-fold increase to Americans’ radiation exposure from scans since 1980.

The March 2009 Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) report to Congress states that overall Medicare imaging utilization growth for 2006 - 2008 was two percent or less nationally. This figure is at or below the growth rate of other major physician services. However, the number of self-referred magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) scans in the Medicare system as well as Medicare spending on self-referred MRI and CT grew at nearly double the rate of that performed by other providers.

According to the ACR, "appropriate use of imaging and radiation therapy treatments can be addressed by wider adoption of ACR Appropriateness Criteria, which help physicians prescribe the most appropriate imaging exam or radiation therapy procedure for a given clinical condition, and computerized physician ordering systems based on these criteria."

The accreditation of imaging facilities, which will be mandated for non-hospital providers under Medicare, effective Jan. 1, 2012, "should be expanded to radiation therapy facilities and include all providers, including hospitals," the ACR said in its statement. "This can provide a baseline quality of care, cut down on radiation dose received from duplicative scans (as well as the cost of duplicative scans), decrease likelihood of adverse events occurring, and help to ensure that patients receive the appropriate dose per scan or treatment."

While government regulation should address financially driven self-referral, the ACR discourages Congress and the regulatory agencies from doing so using across the board reimbursement cuts. The ACR says this only encourages more self-referral and restricts patient access to quality care. The fear is these cuts will run those who do not self-refer out of business or force them to limit the number of Medicare patients they receive.

In the statement, the ACR also stressed that MRI, CT, positron emission tomography (PET) and radiation therapy procedures are not ancillary services. As such, "the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) should remove them from the 'in-office ancillary exception' to federal law, which allows providers to directly profit financially from referring patients to scanners or radiation therapy equipment which they own," the statement said.

The ACR also points out CMS should clamp down on leasing arrangements. Currently, nonradiologists can lease time in an imaging center and claim that the center is thus part of their practice. By doing this, they can refer patients to be scanned in that center during the time they have leased. This creates a direct financial incentive to do more imaging which studies have shown significantly increases the number of scans performed.
"Elected officials, government agency staff, and referring physicians need to support these steps to eliminate financially driven self-referral and make sure that every patient receives the right scan or treatment, at the right time, for the right indication," said the ACR in the statement.

For more information: www.acr.org and www.qualityimaging.org/analysis/GAOHEHS.pdf


Related Content

News | PET-CT

June 19, 2025 — Building on a collaboration that spans more than three decades, GE HealthCare has renewed its research ...

Time June 19, 2025
arrow
News | PET Imaging

May 30, 2025 — GE HealthCare recently announced that the NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology (NCCN Guidelines) ...

Time May 30, 2025
arrow
News | Lung Imaging

April, 15, 2025 — Optellum has entered an agreement with Bristol Myers Squibb to leverage AI in early diagnosis and ...

Time April 17, 2025
arrow
News | Pediatric Imaging

April 10, 2025 — Cincinnati Children’s and GE HealthCare will form a strategic research program focused on driving ...

Time April 10, 2025
arrow
News | SPECT Imaging

Feb. 5, 2025 — Serac Healthcare Ltd., a clinical radiopharmaceutical company developing an innovative molecular imaging ...

Time February 05, 2025
arrow
News | Radiology Imaging

Jan. 15, 2025 — University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Department of Radiology & Biomedical Imaging and GE ...

Time January 27, 2025
arrow
News | Contrast Media

Jan. 10, 2025 – Bayer has announced positive topline results of the Phase III QUANTI studies evaluating the efficacy and ...

Time January 14, 2025
arrow
News | Computed Tomography (CT)

Dec. 3, 2024 — During RSNA '24, GE HealthCare announced the 510(k) submission to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration ...

Time December 18, 2024
arrow
News | SPECT Imaging

Dec. 2, 2024 — GE HealthCare has agreed to acquire full ownership of Nihon Medi-Physics Co., Ltd (NMP), by purchasing ...

Time December 05, 2024
arrow
News | Women's Health

Aug. 19, 2024 — GE HealthCare recently announced a collaboration with the University of California San Diego School of ...

Time August 29, 2024
arrow
Subscribe Now