Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
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Traditional Medicare has announced that they are going to require prior authorization for certain procedures. Apparently, the decision will be made by AI.
The good news is that it is a pilot program that will last six years and it will only apply to six states - New Jersey, Ohio, Oklahoma, Texas, Arizona, and Washington. And it only applies to 17 procedures. Skin and tissue substitutes Nerve stimulators Stimulation devices Epidural steroid injections Cervical fusion Knee arthroscopy Incontinence control devices Facet joint interventions Blepharoplasty Botulinum toxin injection Rhinoplasty Panniculectomy Vein ablation Implanted neurostimulators Cervical fusion with disc removal Osteogenic stimulators Knee orthoses I don't know what most of those are so perhaps the doctors on TOTV can comment on whether the procedures are necessary. https://www.cms.gov/files/document/wiser-fact-sheet.pdf Prior Authorization Coming to Traditional Medicare Starting in 2026 | Kiplinger Last edited by Rainger99; Today at 09:27 AM. |
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I believe blepharoplasty, rhinoplasty and vein ablation can be nonessential surgeries done by plastic surgeons.
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"No one is more hated than he who speaks the truth." Plato “To argue with a person who has renounced the use of reason is like administering medicine to the dead.” Thomas Paine |
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If you have a deviated septum, or your nose was broken and is now badly misshapen, or you were born with a deformity in the nose and can't breathe out of it properly, then a rhinoplasty would be the medically appropriate solution. You do need your nose, and fixing it isn't always exclusively a cosmetic thing. The same for a blepharoplasty - a relative had that done because his eyelids were sagging so far down that he was having trouble seeing and the eyelashes were turning inward and irritating his eyeballs. He had the excess skin removed and a few weeks later, all was well again. On the other hand, getting an eyelid lift just because you want to look younger - shouldn't be covered in the first place. And getting a nose job just because you don't like how it curves outward at the ridge - is also a cosmetic thing and shouldn't be covered. For things like that, it's important to know WHY there's a recommendation for a procedure. If it's medically necessary, it should be covered. If not, then no. A pre-auth is really a matter of paperwork UNLESS you're dealing with an insurance company that typically rejects pre-auths. |
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