Tag Archives | medical

Medicare Durable Medical Equipment (DME) policy tips

Here are some pointers for qualifying for a lift chair, and for replacing old DMEs. As you probably know already, Medicare can pay 80% and Medicaid can pay the remaining 20% for qualifying members. But, for lift chairs, there is an added cost for the chair itself.

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Adult Medical Program Open Enrollment

Adult Medical Program Begins Open Enrollment

Adults age 18-64, without health insurance, may begin to apply to the Adult Medical Program with the Michigan Department of Human Services (DHS). Open enrollment begins April 1st and continues through April 30th. The Adult Medical Program pays for basic medical care with low, to no co-pays and offers more coverage than a County Health Plan. To qualify you must:

  • Be between the ages of 18-64
  • Have no minor children at home
  • No income to low income: $316 (gross) a month, $425 a month for a married couple (higher income if working)
  • U.S. citizen, or legal resident for 5 years

You may apply at your local DHS Office. You may also use the DHS Kiosk computers in the lobby to apply online for the program, and someone will assist you. An application is also available online. The enrollment period ends on Tuesday, April 30.

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Medical Procedures to Avoid

For the Elderly, Medical Procedures to Avoid

By PAULA SPAN

The Choosing Wisely campaign, an initiative by the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation in partnership with Consumer Reports, kicked off last spring. It is an attempt to alert both doctors and patients to problematic and commonly overused medical tests, procedures and treatments.

It took an elegantly simple approach: By working through professional organizations representing medical specialties, Choosing Wisely asked doctors to identify “Five Things Physicians and Patients Should Question.”

The idea was that doctors and their patients could agree on tests and treatments that are supported by evidence, that don’t duplicate what others do, that are “truly necessary” and “free from harm” — and avoid the rest.

Among the 18 new lists released last week are recommendations from geriatricians and palliative care specialists, which may be of particular interest to New Old Age readers. I’ve previously written about a number of these warnings, but it’s helpful to have them in single, strongly worded documents.

The winners — or perhaps, losers?

Both the American Geriatrics Society and the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine agreed on one major “don’t.” Topping both lists was an admonition against feeding tubes for people with advanced dementia.

“This is not news; the data’s been out for at least 15 years,” said Sei Lee, a geriatrician at the University of California, San Francisco, and a member of the working group that narrowed more than 100 recommendations down to five. Feeding tubes don’t prevent aspiration pneumonia or prolong dementia patients’ lives, the research shows, but they do exacerbate bedsores and cause such distress that people often try to pull them out and wind up in restraints. The doctors recommended hand-feeding dementia patients instead.

The geriatricians’ list goes on to warn against the routine prescribing of antipsychotic medications for dementia patients who become aggressive or disruptive. Though drugs like Haldol, Risperdal and Zyprexa remain widely used, “all of these have been shown to increase the risk of stroke and cardiovascular death,” Dr. Lee said. They should be last resorts, after behavioral interventions.

The other questionable tests and treatments:

No. 3: Prescribing medications to achieve “tight glycemic control” (defined as below 7.5 on the A1c test) in elderly diabetics, who need to control their blood sugar, but not as strictly as younger patients.

No. 4: Turning to sleeping pills as the first choice for older people who suffer from agitation, delirium or insomnia. Xanax, Ativan, Valium, Ambien, Lunesta — “they don’t magically disappear from your body when you wake up in the morning,” Dr. Lee said. They continue to slow reaction times, resulting in falls and auto accidents. Other sleep therapies are preferable.

No. 5: Prescribing antibiotics when tests indicate a urinary tract infection, but the patient has no discomfort or other symptoms. Many older people have bacteria in their bladders but don’t suffer ill effects; repeated use of antibiotics just causes drug resistance, leaving them vulnerable to more dangerous infections. “Treat the patient, not the lab test,” Dr. Lee said.

The palliative care doctors’ Five Things list cautions against delaying palliative care, which can relieve pain and control symptoms even as patients pursue treatments for their diseases.

It also urges discussion about deactivating implantable cardioverter-defibrillators, or ICDs, in patients with irreversible diseases. “Being shocked is like being kicked in the chest by a mule,” said Eric Widera, a palliative care specialist at the San Francisco V.A. Medical Center who served on the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine working group. “As someone gets close to the end of life, these ICDs can’t prolong life and they cause a lot of pain.”

Turning the devices off — an option many patients don’t realize they have — requires simple computer reprogramming or a magnet, not the surgery that installed them in the first place.

The palliative care doctors also pointed out that patients suffering pain as cancer spreads to their bones get as much relief, the evidence shows, from a single dose of radiation than from 10 daily doses that require travel to hospitals or treatment centers.

Finally, their list warned that topical gels widely used by hospice staffs to control nausea do not work because they aren’t absorbed through the skin. “We have lots of other ways to give anti-nausea drugs,” Dr. Widera said.

You can read all the Five Things lists (more are coming later this year), and the Consumer Reports publications that do a good job of translating them, on the Choosing Wisely Web site.


Paula Span is the author of “When the Time Comes: Families With Aging Parents Share Their Struggles and Solutions.”

Source: New York Times, 2/28/13,  http://newoldage.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/28/for-the-elderly-lists-of-tests-to-avoid/

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WSU Interprofessional Team Older Adult Visit Program.

Thank you again for your past support of our Interprofessional Team Older Adult Visit Program.

 

Our deadline is October 1 for adding older adults to be visited by the interprofessional students’ team.  If you know of any other older adults who might be interested, could you please forward this message to them?  THANK YOU

 

  1. Our students will be in touch towards the end of November for visits to be completed by Dec 5
  2. If not contact for the November visits contact will be made in early January for visits to be completed by mid Feb

 

Let me know if you have questions.  Thank you again

 

Jenny

 

Jennifer Mendez, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor and Director, Co-Curricular Programs

Wayne State University

School of Medicine

320 East Canfield #203 Mazurek Education Commons

Detroit, MI 48201

313-577-2125

313-577-1457 FAX

 

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Solving the transportation puzzle

 Finding non-emergency medical transportation for clients is like trying to solve a Rubik’s cube. Certain elements need to come together just right – or your client may be out of luck. Providing the right resources can be especially tough if you don’t know how to navigate the system. Elements to consider while researching options include: The exact location of the destination, date, time, and duration of the appointment, and whether the client will be under anesthesia during the visit. All of these factors will determine the resource given to a client. Other questions to consider may not be as obvious. In a recent e-mail correspondence, Sara Mary Wallace, mobility specialist at Area Agency on Aging 1-B provided the following tips:

 I know how frustrating finding transportation can be.  The goal of the program I work for, myride2,  is to be a one-call, one-click mobility management service dedicated to helping seniors and adults with disabilities remain mobile for life.  Our website and call center are designed for users to easily connect to transportation resources and information.  Even though it is literally our job to find folks transportation, it can be challenging at times.  Here are some tips that might help:

 1.)    If someone lives in Oakland or Macomb Counties, they can call us!  myride2 Mobility Specialists are available from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, to help individuals find which types of transportation options would work best for them.  People can call us toll-free at 1-855-myride2 (697-4332).  They can also visit our website at www.myride2.com and search for providers who serve their zip code.

 2.)   If you are needing non-emergency, medical transportation keep in mind that these companies need to be licensed properly by the State of Michigan.  They are required to have a Certificate as an Authorized Limousine Carrier.  (Yes, a “limo license.”)  If you follow this link: http://mdotwas1.mdot.state.mi.us/public/licensedcarriers/carriers.cfm?type=L, it will take you to the Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) website.  It shows you all of the providers that currently have the certificate.  You can choose a report by County (so it will pull up all current carriers in whatever county you want), or you can look at the entire list for the State of Michigan (which alphabetizes them by the city they are located in, so it’s fairly easy to see what’s available in a certain city). 

 a.      Keep in mind that this list has actual limo companies on it as well, but you can often tell by the name which are limo companies and which are non-emergency medical transportation carriers.

3.)   If a person has Medicaid, one of the benefits of full Medicaid is transportation to and from medical appointments.  If a person lives in Oakland, Wayne or Macomb counties they can call the transportation provider LogistiCare at 1-866-569-1902.  They will need to provide their active Medicaid ID number, but should then be able to get transportation to any medical appointments they have, anywhere in the State.  If someone lives in another county, they would need to call their DHS office and as to speak to the Transportation Coordinator.

 4.)   Look for resources or non-profit groups that focus on a particular group of people.  If your client is a Veteran, see if the local Veterans office has any volunteers.  If someone is getting cancer treatments, contact the American Cancer Society.  If you are trying to help a person with a visual impairment, see if the local LIONS club might help.  Also many senior centers provide some type of transportation within the city they serve.

 5.)   Don’t rule out home help agencies.  These agencies generally charge approximately $20/hour and require a minimum number of hours.  However, if you client has an insured vehicle, the home help worker can often drive the client’s car, and there is no mileage fee.  If a minimum is 3 hours, the trip would cost about $60.00 and you have a person staying with your client the whole time.  Often transportation provider’s roundtrip fees are more expensive, and they client is picked-up and dropped off.

 Sara Mary Wallace can be reached directly at 248-262-1289 or at swallace@aaa1b.com

 

 

 

 

 

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