Celebrating Nurses’ Monumental Impact
There is a myriad of ways to participate in National Nurses Week, which is celebrated May 6-12, from honoring your staff RNs with a gift or event to taking steps to let...
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By: Lisa Arbisser
Published: 10/10/2007
At the risk of seeming like just another surgeon whining about ever-declining insurance reimbursements, I hereby sound the alarm. When I learned that our Medicare Part B carrier, Noridian Administrative Services, LLC, intends to deny monitored anesthesia care (MAC) to patients undergoing lens procedures in 11 states, money was not my worry. Rather, I was (and still am) truly fearful for the safety of my cataract patients.
I believe MAC is indicated for cataract patients whether they receive topical anesthesia or regional blocks.
Insurers like Noridian must understand that there is no cookbook methodology when it comes to performing cataract extraction under topical or regional anesthesia. In fact, the commonly used topical approach actually requires a heightened level of MAC to avert surgical complications. I feel so strongly about this that I personally employ the anesthesiologist for elective IOL refractive procedures at my own expense, even though these patients are typically young and healthy. But this is well worth it because topical anesthesia with MAC is the safest approach for the vast majority of cataract patients. It frees them from the serious risks associated with general or regional anesthesia - including globe perforation or inadvertent damage to adjacent structures in the case of periocular injection anesthesia; loss of the globe or even systemic catastrophe from intravascular or nerve sheath injection; and, more commonly, damage to adnexal structures that can lead to ptosis and/or strabismus repair.
Unfortunately, the declining reimbursement for Medicare cataract procedures does not afford me this same economic freedom for "routine" cataract patients, and I fear I will face an ethical dilemma if my patients are denied MAC. Denying cataract patients MAC will impact outcomes, comfort and safety, and will significantly decrease quality of care. Beyond this, I fear for my own safety when I inevitably become the patient.
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