
Psychiatr News October 6, 2006
Volume 41, Number 19, page 18
© 2006 American Psychiatric Association
Retiring CMS Head Gets High Marks
Mark Moran
The administrator who oversaw Medicare and Medicaid in trying
timesduring the launch of the Part D prescription drug benefit and
severe budget cutbacksis ready to hand the baton off to someone
else.
Mark McClellan, M.D., Ph.D., is leaving his post as administrator of the
federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), citing a desire to
spend more time with his family.
"This was a hard decision, because this is the most exciting and
rewarding place that anyone could ever work," McClellan wrote in an
e-mail sent to CMS staff and reporters. "But I've been in government
service for much longer than my family and I had ever expected or prepared
for, and after almost six years in this administration plus service in the
previous administration as well, I'm looking forward to more dinners at home
with [my wife] Steph and our daughters."
Attorney Leslie Norwalk, CMS deputy administrator, has been named acting
head of the agency effective October 15.
As CMS administrator, McClellan oversaw Medicaid and Medicare, which
together provide health benefits for about 90 million U.S. residents and
manages a federal budget of about $700 billion. One of his primary
responsibilities during his tenure at CMS was administering the implementation
of the Medicare Part D prescription drug benefit, which began in January.
"Dr. McClellan did a yeoman's job during a very difficult
periodwhen CMS was responsible for the implementation of Medicare Part
D," said Eugene Cassel, J.D., director of APA's Division of Advocacy.
"We hope the next director will be as engaged."
"The Part D program is a historical landmark for the Medicare
program," commented Irvin Muszynski, J.D., director of APA's Office of
Healthcare Systems and Financing. "Both before and after the program's
launch this past January, Dr. McClellan was accessible and thoughtful and
provided leadership on key problems that we identified as having an adverse
impact on people with mental illness.
"Another CMS issue that is important to psychiatry is the Medicare
physician fee schedule [see page
17]. Effective January 1, overall Medicare reimbursement for
physician services will drop by 5.1 percent unless Congress takes action. It
is critical that Dr. McClellan weigh in to support a reversal of the scheduled
cut and urge a positive payment update instead. As a physician, he understands
the need to reimburse physicians appropriately for their services so that they
can continue to provide quality care to beneficiaries."
McClellan was sworn in as CMS administrator in March 2004, after serving
for two years as commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration. Prior to
that appointment, he had been a member of the White House Council of Economic
Advisers and a senior health policy aide to President George W. Bush.
"We've worked with partners to get 90 percent of people with Medicare
into drug coverage, and we've implemented the biggest transition in drug
coverage ever in this country," McClellan wrote in his farewell e-mail.
"We've found and fixed startup problems, we are delivering coverage at a
cost at least 25 percent less than had been expected, and we are seeing
beneficiary satisfaction rates of over 80 percent. For 2007, the benefit costs
are going down further, and many drug plans will have lower premiums and
options for enhanced coverage as well."
McClellan also cited work undertaken during his administration to reorient
the Medicare program toward preventive services.
"In Medicare, with drug coverage, new preventive coverage, new
services to provide support for people with chronic diseases, and better
coordinated care options than ever before, we are shifting the focus to
prevention and care coordination," he wrote. "One of the most
important parts of this transformation involves the original Medicare program,
which now has more support for prevention and quality care than ever....
"And we have also taken critical steps to transform Medicaid, as we
implement the most important reform legislation in the program's
history," he wrote. "[M]ore people with a disability have control
over how they get long-term-care services than ever before, and more states
are implementing coordinated care for dually eligible beneficiaries than ever
before. This has all happened as we have slowed the rate of Medicaid spending
growth, from the double digits five years ago to around 5 percent this past
year."
Related Article:
-
APA, AMA Call for Reforms In Medicare Payment Formula
- Rich Daly
Psychiatr News 2006 41: 17-38.
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