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Rising gas
prices affecting Home Health Care Workers;
Industry considers replacing Rural Visits
with Remote Monitoring
[Jul 21, 2008] Rising fuel prices are causing
financial strain for some home health care
workers and the industry is considering
replacing some services in rural areas with
remote monitoring systems, the
AP/Chicago Tribune reports.
Gasoline prices have increased by more than
80% in the past 18 months, and experts say
it is "a particularly knotty problem for
nurses, aides and other employees of home
health care agencies -- many of whom are
responsible for their own travel expenses
and depend on government reimbursements that
haven't yet caught up with the rising prices
at the pump," the AP/Tribune reports.
A survey by the
National Association of Area Agencies on
Aging found that 50% of home care
employees said they have already cut back on
home visits because of fuel costs and 90%
expect to make cuts in 2009.
Industry officials have said they are
unaware of any instances where a patient's
care was compromised because of
transportation costs, but "they are worried
it could happen," according to the
AP/Tribune.
In order to ensure patients get the care
they need, some companies are providing
employees with prepaid gas cards, fuel
efficient rental cars, computer mapping
software to reduce the number of miles
workers drive between home assignments.
Some home health care companies also are
considering "abandoning uneconomical home
visits in far-flung locations" and
increasing the use of remote monitoring
systems to check patients' vital signs,
"which many companies previously deemed too
expensive," the AP/Tribune reports.
The
Home Care Technology Association of America
is lobbying Congress to change Medicare
rules by reimbursing companies who adopt the
use of remote monitoring systems.
Meanwhile, NAHC is pushing Congress to
reinstate Medicare's rural "add-on," which
expired in 2006 and would provide a 5%
increase in reimbursements to home care
providers who serve beneficiaries in rural
areas (Richtmyer, AP/Chicago Tribune,
7/20).
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