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April 24, 2005
Medicare Change Will Limit Access to Claim Hearing
By ROBERT PEAR <http://query.nytimes.com/search/query?ppds=bylL&v1=ROBERT
PEAR&fdq=19960101&td=sysdate&sort=newest&ac=ROBERT
PEAR&inline=nyt-per>
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ASHINGTON, April 23 - A new federal policy will make it significantly
more difficult for Medicare beneficiaries to obtain hearings in person
before a judge when the government denies their claims for home care,
nursing home services, prescription drugs and other treatments.
For years, hearings have been held at more than 140 Social Security
offices around the country. In July, the Department of Health and
Human Services will take over the responsibility, and department
officials said all judges would then be located at just four sites -
in Cleveland; Miami; Irvine, Calif.; and Arlington, Va.
Under the new policy, Medicare officials said, most hearings will be
held with videoconference equipment or by telephone. A beneficiary who
wants to appear in person before a judge must show that "special or
extraordinary circumstances exist," the rules say.
But a beneficiary who insists on a face-to-face hearing will lose the
right to receive a decision within 90 days, the deadline set by
statute.
The policy change comes as administration officials are predicting an
increase in the volume of cases, with the creation of a Medicare drug
benefit expected to generate large numbers of claims and appeals. But
in a recent study, the Government Accountability Office, an
investigative arm of Congress, questioned the reliance on
videoconferences, saying that "beneficiaries are often uncomfortable
using videoconference facilities and prefer to have their cases heard
face to face."
All beneficiaries are 65 or older or disabled. About 5 million of the
41 million beneficiaries are 85 or older, and some are so sick they
die while pursuing appeals.
When claims are denied, beneficiaries and their health care providers
can challenge the decisions in an appeals process that has several
levels of review. Their best chance to win coverage comes when they
appear before impartial, independent adjudicators known as
administrative law judges.
Over the last five years, beneficiaries and providers prevailed in
two-thirds of the 283,000 cases decided by these judges.
The Department of Health and Human Services defended its new policy,
saying the use of videoconference equipment would enable judges to
"complete more cases" within the 90-day deadline, because they would
not have to spend time traveling to remote sites. In a summary of its
plans, the department said it was "not economically or
administratively feasible" to station judges around the country.
"Having fewer offices is more cost-effective in terms of management,
technology and training," the department said in a letter answering
questions from Congress.
Michael O. Leavitt, the secretary of health and human services, said,
"Access to hearings for Medicare beneficiaries will be as good as or
better than" what is now available. For some beneficiaries, he said,
video hearings could be more convenient.
"Video teleconferences will allow hearings to be provided more timely,
with vastly more access points than Social Security currently provides
through its offices," Mr. Leavitt said.
But lawmakers, judges, consumer groups and lawyers for beneficiaries
expressed concern.
Senator Charles E. Grassley, the Iowa Republican who is chairman of
the Finance Committee, and Senator Max Baucus of Montana, the senior
Democrat on the panel, said four hearing offices were not enough.
Mr. Grassley and Mr. Baucus were among the principal authors of the
2003 Medicare law. The law, they noted, says Medicare judges are to be
distributed "throughout the United States."
Under the new arrangement, hearings for Medicare beneficiaries in New
York, New Jersey and all of New England will normally be held by
judges in Cleveland. Hearings for people in Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and
Nebraska will be held by judges in southern California.
Judith A. Stein, director of the Center for Medicare Advocacy, which
has represented thousands of people in hearings since 1986, said: "The
videoconferences are one of many changes that will reduce the
beneficiaries' ability to get fair, favorable decisions. Sick, old and
disabled people can be much more effective in person because the judge
can see their illnesses and infirmities - how they walk, how they get
up from a chair, how their hands shake with tremors."
Nancy M. Coleman, director of the Commission on Law and Aging, a
policy and research arm of the American Bar Association, said, "It's a
travesty, what's happening to the appeal rights of Medicare
beneficiaries."
Ronald G. Bernoski, president of the Association of Administrative Law
Judges, said face-to-face hearings were valuable for judges and
beneficiaries alike.
"Video teleconferences will undermine the judges' ability to assess
the credibility and demeanor of witnesses," said Mr. Bernoski, a judge
based in Milwaukee. "And it could reduce the beneficiaries' confidence
in the proceedings. The intrinsic value of a Medicare hearing is that
citizens have an opportunity to sit down in front of a high-ranking
official and tell their story to someone who listens carefully and
makes a reasoned decision."
One person who benefited from a Medicare hearing is Ethel L. Swarm,
76, of Bethel, Conn. She said she had excruciating pain in her left
leg, was unable to walk and spent four days at Danbury Hospital. But
Medicare refused to cover her stay, saying it was not medically
necessary. Medicare also refused to pay for a subsequent 37-day stay
in a nursing home.
After reviewing the medical evidence, administrative law judges ruled
in favor of Mrs. Swarm. She won $7,437 for her hospital care and
$9,250 for the nursing home stay, which helped her walk again.
The 2003 law shifted the responsibility for hearing Medicare appeals
from Social Security to the Department of Health and Human Services,
which is in the process of hiring 50 judges.
The government is still working out details and lining up sites with
the necessary videoconference links. Nancy A. Thompson, director of
the transition team at the department, refused to answer questions
about the new hearing and appeal procedures or the logistical
arrangements.
Ronald T. Osborn of Charlotte, N.C., who has been an administrative
law judge since 1974 and has specialized in Medicare cases since 1996,
said he had no interest in moving to the Department of Health and
Human Services.
"Under the department's procedural rules," Mr. Osborn said, "judges
will have less freedom to handle individual cases as they see fit."
Ms. Stein said that under the rules "it will be easier for Medicare
officials to participate in hearings and to influence decisions, often
to the detriment of beneficiaries."
Bill Hall, a spokesman for the department, said such concerns were
unfounded because the judges would report to the health secretary, not
the Medicare program chief.
Medicare and Social Security officials have long contended that some
administrative law judges were improperly favoring beneficiaries. For
their part, the judges have periodically complained that officials put
pressure on them to approve fewer claims. In the early 1980's, the
tension became so acute that the judges filed suit against the
secretary of health and human services to preserve their independence.
Under the new rules, issued in March by the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services, administrative law judges must follow the Medicare
law and regulations and must "give substantial deference" to manuals
and guidelines issued by Medicare officials. In a particular case, a
judge can decline to follow a Medicare policy, but must explain why.
Video testimony has emerged as a volatile issue in several forums. The
United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, in Atlanta, is
reviewing criminal convictions obtained at a trial in Alabama where
two witnesses testified by video link from Australia. Defendants said
the arrangement violated their constitutional right to confront
witnesses.
But prosecutors said that in the age of the Internet and global
conspiracies, they had a growing need for testimony from foreign
witnesses who would not come to the United States.


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