Podcasts

Medicare annual wellness visit remains underused


 

AT AAIC 2016

References

TORONTO – The annual Medicare wellness visit offers patients and their doctors the chance to review a variety of health concerns, and includes a cognitive health checkup. It’s free for patients and fully reimbursable for physicians. But the visit is far underused, averaging about 14% uptake each year across the United States, according to Pamela Mink, PhD.

Dr. Mink and her colleagues at Minneapolis, Minn.–based Allina Health examined which patients used the visit during 2011-2015 in the Allina Health system. They found annual increases in usage, but by the end of the 5-year period it had been used at least once by only 44% of eligible patients despite some considerable outreach efforts. Those who did were most often white or Asian women who lived in urban areas and were younger than 74 years.

“There’s a real opportunity for tracking and identifying cognitive health issues early here, and it’s being missed,” Dr. Mink said during a press briefing at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference 2016. “Improving this situation is going to require leadership from health systems, the clinicians administering the visit, and the patients themselves. It’s basic education: Clinicians need to know it’s reimbursable. Patients need to know it’s free, and that it’s a valuable opportunity to address health issues – including any cognitive impairment that may be developing – early.”

Dr. Mink is employed by Allina Health as a senior scientist.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

msullivan@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @alz_gal

Recommended Reading

Sleep apnea in later life more than doubles subsequent Alzheimer’s risk
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA panel narrowly endorses empagliflozin’s cardiovascular mortality benefit
MDedge Family Medicine
Account for all medications, even if they’re banned
MDedge Family Medicine
Insomnia severity more pronounced in older Hispanics
MDedge Family Medicine
New fragility fracture recommendations emphasize coordination of care
MDedge Family Medicine
Newer insulin glargine formula curbs nocturnal hypoglycemia
MDedge Family Medicine
Use simple algorithms to manage dementia
MDedge Family Medicine
Withdrawing risperidone spikes risk for psychotic relapse in hallucinating Alzheimer’s patients
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Loss of function in Rab10 gene cuts Alzheimer’s risk by up to 40%
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Medicare pays billions for potentially avoidable hospital admissions in dementia patients
MDedge Family Medicine