Wolff Jennifer L, Agree Emily M, Kasper Judith D
Department of Health Policy and Management and Lipitz Center for Integrated Health Care, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, in Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Health Aff (Millwood). 2005 Jul-Aug;24(4):1140-9. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.24.4.1140.
Medicare's role in the distribution of mobility-related assistive technology has not been well documented, yet rapid growth and regional variation in spending, and concerns over "in-the-home" coverage criteria, highlight the need for facts. Using the 2001 Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey, we find that 6.2 percent percent of beneficiaries obtained mobility assistive technology under the Medicare durable medical equipment (DME) benefit. These beneficiaries were disproportionately poor, disabled, and users of both acute and postacute services. Average per item spending ranged from $52 for canes to $6,208 for power wheelchairs. Among beneficiaries who acquired such technology through the DME benefit, these devices comprised just 2 percent of overall Medicare spending.
医疗保险在与行动相关的辅助技术分配中所起的作用尚未得到充分记录,但支出的快速增长和地区差异,以及对“家庭内”覆盖标准的担忧,凸显了获取事实的必要性。利用2001年医疗保险当前受益人调查,我们发现6.2%的受益人在医疗保险耐用医疗设备(DME)福利下获得了行动辅助技术。这些受益人中贫困、残疾以及急性和急性后服务使用者的比例过高。每件物品的平均支出从拐杖的52美元到电动轮椅的6208美元不等。在通过DME福利获得此类技术的受益人中,这些设备仅占医疗保险总支出的2%。