Access to Inpatient Rehabilitation Therapy Act of 2014 H.R. 4755 - TopicsExpress



          

Access to Inpatient Rehabilitation Therapy Act of 2014 H.R. 4755 has been introduced! Congressman Glenn (GT) Thompson (R-PA) and Congressman G.K. Butterfield (D-NC) have introduced H.R. 4755: Access to Inpatient Rehabilitation Therapy Act of 2014. What is the Purpose of this Act? It is the purpose of this Act to restore reliance on the professional judgment of the treating physician and the rehabilitation team when determining whether a Medicare patient meets the intensity of therapy requirement of an inpatient rehabilitation hospital or unit in order for that patient to gain access to the appropriate mix of medically necessary therapeutic rehabilitation services in that setting, including physical therapy, occupational therapy, and, as needed, speech therapy, orthotics and prosthetics, and recreational therapy. What does this bill do? This bill will amend the Social Security Act by including recreational therapy among the modalities that constitute an intensive rehabilitation therapy program. Specifically, the bill adds the following new paragraph to the end of Section 1886(j) of the Social Security Act: (9) Including Recreational Therapy among the therapy modalities that constitute an intensive rehabilitation therapy program in a rehabilitation facility. - The Secretary shall include recreational therapy services among the therapeutic modalities that constitute an intensive rehabilitation program in determining (pursuant to applicable regulations) whether inpatient services in a rehabilitation facility are reasonable and necessary under section 1862(a)(1)(A).. Why is this important? By including RT under the intensity of therapy requirement, Medicare beneficiaries in inpatient rehabilitation hospitals and units will regain access to important therapies deemed medically necessary by their treating physicians and therapists. IRFs will be better able to meet the intensity of rehabilitation therapy requirement and thus reduce the risk that patients will be inappropriately diverted into less intensive post-acute settings. Coalition of Support Several organizations have joined the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (AAPM&R) in supporting this amendment including: American Medical Rehabilitation Providers Association American Academy of Orthotists and Prosthetists American Therapeutic Recreation Association Brain Injury Association of America CARF, International (Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities) Council on Brain Injury United Spinal Association What can you do? 1. Read the H.R. 4755: Access to Inpatient Rehabilitation Therapy Act of 2014 2. Read the letter of support from AAPM&R 3. Contact your Congressperson and ask them to sign on in support of H.R. 4755 Action Requested Step 1: Contact your U.S. Congresspersons office and find out who handles health care issues for the Congressperson. You can reach them through the U.S. Capitol Switchboard at (202) 224-3121 or by going through the direct website: house.gov. Step 2: Tell them about H.R. 4755 and ask them to sign on as a co-sponsor in support of H.R. 4755. Ask them for their direct email so you can send them a copy of the H.R. 4755 and the letter of support. (You can use this template.) If they ask for a staff contact for either of the Congressmen, tell them to contact Matt Brennan (202) 225-5121 in Congressman Thompsons office or Saul Hernandez (202) 225-3101 in Congressman Butterfields office. Step 3: Urge your colleagues, clients, volunteers, students, etc. to do the same. We have a short window of opportunity and all signatures need to be on the letter - so we need you and your colleagues to act fast! This will take the entire profession! The United States House of Representatives · House.gov house.gov Home page of the United States House of Representatives
Posted on: Tue, 10 Jun 2014 01:29:19 +0000

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