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  Vol. 300 No. 18, November 12, 2008 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Reimbursement for Patient and Family Meetings and the Costs of Care at the End of Life—Reply

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text and any section headings.

In Reply: I agree with Dr Hilty that low and delayed reimbursement can make it difficult for patients to receive the type of care they desire and likely contributes to continuing chemotherapy until death is imminent, when there are no other options but to switch to hospice at the last moment.

In addition to the delays and low reimbursement, Medicare may deny palliative care as a second charge if a patient is separately billed by an internist for treatment of heart failure. Medicare and other payers have a code for a family meeting to discuss goals of care (code 99367-99368; team conference, no direct patient and/or family contact), which is often critical to informing the family about current circumstances, options, and goals. Such meetings may be contentious and lengthy. However, there is no payment associated with that code. For a physician to be reimbursed, the only current option would be . . . [Full Text of this Article]

Thomas J. Smith, MD
tsmith5@mcvh-vcu.edu
Massey Cancer Center
Virginia Commonwealth University
Richmond, Virginia



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RELATED ARTICLE

The Role of Chemotherapy at the End of Life: "When Is Enough, Enough?"
Sarah Elizabeth Harrington and Thomas J. Smith
JAMA. 2008;299(22):2667-2678.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  

RELATED LETTER

Reimbursement for Patient and Family Meetings and the Costs of Care at the End of Life
Stephen A. Hilty
JAMA. 2008;300(18):2119-2120.
EXTRACT | FULL TEXT  






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