Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02214, USA.
J Neurointerv Surg. 2013 Jul;5(4):382-6. doi: 10.1136/neurintsurg-2013-010776. Epub 2013 May 4.
Federal healthcare spending has been a subject of intense concern as the US Congress continues to search for ways to reduce the budget deficit. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated that, even though it is growing more slowly than previously projected, federal spending on Medicare, Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) will reach nearly $900 billion in 2013. In 2011 the Medicare program paid $68 billion for physicians and other health professional services, 12% of total Medicare spending. Since 2002 the sustainable growth rate (SGR) correction has called for reductions to physician reimbursements; however, Congress has typically staved off these reductions, although the situation remains precarious for physicians who accept Medicare. The fiscal cliff agreement that came into focus at the end of 2012 averted a 26.5% reduction to physician reimbursements related to the SGR correction. Nonetheless, the threat of these devastating cuts continues to loom. The Administration, Congress and others have devised many options to fix this unsustainable situation. This review explores the historical development of the SGR, touches on elements of the formula itself and outlines current proposals for fixing the SGR problem. A recent CBO estimate reduces the potential cost of a 10-year fix of SGR system to $138 billion. This has provided new hope for resolution of this long-standing issue.
联邦医疗支出一直是美国国会关注的焦点,因为国会一直在寻找降低预算赤字的方法。国会预算办公室(CBO)估计,尽管医疗保险、医疗补助和儿童健康保险计划(SCHIP)的联邦支出增长速度比之前预测的要慢,但到 2013 年,这些支出将达到近 9000 亿美元。2011 年,医疗保险计划为医生和其他卫生专业人员服务支付了 680 亿美元,占医疗保险总支出的 12%。自 2002 年以来,可持续增长率(SGR)调整要求降低医生的报销费用;然而,国会通常会避免这些削减,尽管接受医疗保险的医生的情况仍然不稳定。2012 年底出现的财政悬崖协议避免了与 SGR 调整相关的医生报销费用减少 26.5%。尽管如此,这些毁灭性削减的威胁仍然迫在眉睫。政府、国会和其他各方已经设计了许多选择来解决这种不可持续的情况。本综述探讨了 SGR 的历史发展,涉及该公式本身的要素,并概述了当前解决 SGR 问题的建议。CBO 的最新估计将 10 年修复 SGR 系统的潜在成本降低到 1380 亿美元。这为解决这一长期存在的问题提供了新的希望。