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SPECIAL AWARDS ISSUE 05.2015 A Publication of the American Academy of Dermatology Association Navigating Practice, Policy, and Patient Care www.aad.org GARGANTUAN GROWING GENERIC PRICES Soaring prices force dermatologists to rethink common therapies 26 + 07 Coding 16 Research 18 Legal Issues 24 Practice Management 48 Academy News Dermatology-Specific Simplified. Dermatology-specific to simplify the way you work. When your electronic medical records (EMR) system works like you do and when it’s been designed with the dermatology-specific knowledge you need, it works for you, not the other way around. That’s EMA Dermatology™. And when combined with our other dermatology-specific solutions for billing, revenue cycle management and more, you can increase efficiencies in your entire practice ecosystem to enhance financial performance. Tap, touch, done. Dermatology-specific across the practice. It’s that simple. Learn more | www.modmed.com/dermatology w w w. m o d m e d . c o m | 5 6 1 . 8 8 0 . 2 9 9 8 “ I watched a demo, and was completely blown away. This was an EMR that didn’t run on templates and macros and would actually adapt to how I practiced. It just worked so differently than any other EMR I had touched. That day, I called up my EMR vendor, cancelled my contract and switched to EMA Dermatology. Jerome Potozkin, MD* EMR System “Every physician fears that their level of productivity will decrease when implementing an EMR system. That wasn’t the case with EMA Dermatology. Right out of the gate, our productivity held fast.” Billing Services “My practice also utilizes Modernizing Medicine Billing Services RCM solution. We find that outsourcing our billing allows us more time to spend with our patients and it frees up the phone lines.” ” Inventory Management “We use the inventory management system to track our cosmetic product sales and this really simplifies that business process for us. It is easy to use whether it is inputting products, selling products or managing inventory.” Comprehensive Dermatology-Specific Solution For Your Practice. Learn more | www.modmed.com/dermatology *Dr. Jerome Potozkin has a financial interest in Modernizing Medicine. in this issue from the editor DEAR READERS, Part of the art of keeping one’s cool when in battle… I s realizing that victory is not always inevitable. I recently read a biography about Stonewall Jackson; it was quite striking that he understood this paradigm well. Some battles went for the Union, while others for the Confederacy, but it seems that he kept his cool regardless. It is said that his great talent was the ability to respond on the fly in the midst of what must have been quite a confusing landscape. While I personally believe that our country is much the better for the northern success, I think that we can learn much from Jackson about handling pressure under fire. Many of us see ourselves in a battle against the escalating costs of generic meds. Normally I don’t think much about my age, but I feel a bit old when I remember the cost of generics when I finished my training. Doxycycline at six cents a pill was affordable for almost everyone and tetracycline was even cheaper. Treating acne was not an expensive undertaking. Not so today. As our feature on this topic explains these same pills, without further research and discovery, have increased anywhere from 7000-18,000 percent! I feel a bit like my grandmother who used to tell me how during the depression a cup of soup cost five cents. I’m sure your patients are complaining just like mine. Read our piece to understand the possible causes: material shortages and consolidation of the pharmaceutical industry leading to fewer companies making generics are on the table. It is mysterious to me that some generics have remained inexpensive…why is clobetasol more expensive than betamethasone diproprionate, for example? As a consequence of these costs the number of generics that I use is growing smaller and smaller. Like Jackson, I think we need to figure out how to respond to this issue and documenting what we are all seeing is a good start. We should be sending Adam Rubin’s AAD Regulatory Policy Committee our examples and telling them of our ire. Some of our battles have become unqualified successes. If you want to feel good, then read the piece on sunscreens. We’re finally seeing the FDA speeding up the review process which we hope will grant us access to better sunscreen products. It will be nice to not have to mention to my patients traveling to Canada for a summer holiday that it might be worth their while to pick up sunscreen as part of their souvenirs! This battle to get the newer sunscreen ingredients approved in this country has been long fought and, therefore, the fruit of this labor is especially sweet. I, for one, can’t wait to see some new sunscreen ingredients hit the market. So while one battle on sunscreen ingredients starts to wind down, the next on costs of generics winds up. This, like many of our issues, is best not fought alone. Happily we are not the only prescribers of the tetracycline family of meds…they can be helpful for MRSA infections amongst other things. Stonewall Jackson ultimately was killed by friendly fire. Let’s not make that the model for our fight. Let’s hope that all of us in the house of medicine are on the same side on this one. Enjoy your reading. VOL. 25 NO. 5 | MAY 2015 PRESIDENT Mark Lebwohl, MD EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Elaine Weiss, JD PUBLISHER Lara Lowery EDITOR Katie Domanowski MANAGING EDITOR Richard Nelson, MS ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR Victoria Houghton, MPA DESIGN MANAGER Ed Wantuch EDITORIAL DESIGNER Theresa Oloier DESIGN TEAM Nicole Torling ADVERTISING SPECIALIST Carrie Parratt PHYSICIAN EDITOR Abby Van Voorhees, MD PHYSICIAN REVIEWER Barbara Mathes, MD CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Jan Bowers Ruth Carol Jeanine Coffman Susan Jackson Alexander Miller, MD Victoria Pasko Rob Portman, JD EDITORIAL ADVISORS Lakshi Aldredge, MSN, ANP-BC Annie Chiu, MD Jeffrey Dover, MD Rosalie Elenitsas, MD John Harris, MD, PhD Chad Hivnor, MD Sylvia Hsu, MD Risa Jampel, MD Michel McDonald, MD Christen Mowad, MD Robert Sidbury, MD Oliver Wisco, DO Printed in U.S.A. Copyright © 2015 by the American Academy of Dermatology Association 930 E. Woodfield Rd. Schaumburg, IL 60173-4729 Phone: (847) 330-0230 Fax: (847) 330-0050 MISSION STATEMENT: Dermatology World is published monthly by the American Academy of Dermatology Association. Through insightful analysis of the trends that affect them, it provides members with a trusted, inside source for balanced news and information about managing their practice, understanding legislative and regulatory issues, and incorporating clinical and research developments into patient care. Dermatology World® (ISSN 10602445) is published monthly by the American Academy of Dermatology and AAD Association, 930 E. Woodfield Rd., Schaumburg, IL 60173-4729. Subscription price $48.00 per year included in AAD membership dues. Non-member annual subscription price $108.00 US or $120.00 international. Periodicals Postage Paid at Schaumburg, IL and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Dermatology World®, American Academy of Dermatology Association, P.O. Box 4014, Schaumburg, IL 60168-4014. ADVERTISING: For display advertising information contact Bridget Blaney at (773) 259-2825 or [email protected]. 2 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 ABBY S. VAN VOORHEES, MD, PHYSICIAN EDITOR www.aad.org/dw HOT TOPICS IN DE R M ATO LO GY Are more of your patients suffering fro m Acute stickershockitis? The CareCredit health, wellness and beauty credit card can provide immediate relief for rising patient out-of-pocket fees. 98% of dermatologists surveyed say they experience cost objections from some patients.1 CareCredit special financing options* provide a proven way to quickly treat cost barriers. It gives patients a convenient way to pay for: Ever-increasing deductibles, co-pays and unexpected self-pay costs Procedures and services no longer covered by their insurance Skin cancer procedures including MOHS surgery** Elective procedures and services like injectables and fillers When you remove sticker shock, you can help more patients start and complete your recommended plan for their skin. Get started at no cost, call 866-247-3049 today. www.carecredit.com 1 Dermatology Provider Study, September 2014, Chadwick Martin Bailey *Subject to credit approval. Minimum monthly payment required. **FDA-approved skin cancer treatments only. Preferred Provider DERMW2015CA 05.2015 A Publication of the American Academy of Dermatology Association Navigating Practice, Policy, and Patient Care features www.aad.org depts 02 FROM THE EDITOR 07 CRACKING THE CODE Nail it. “Some of these generic drugs seem to disappear from pharmacy shelves 26 or skyrocket in SPECIAL AWARDS ISSUE price suddenly and GARGANTUAN GROWING GENERIC PRICES without notice Soaring prices force dermatologists to rethink common therapies or any predictable patterns.” COVER STORY BY RUTH CAROL 4 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 18 LEGALLY SPEAKING Power at the bargaining table: Antitrust risks and alternatives for dermatologists. 22 BALANCE IN PRACTICE 24 Profiling the missing pieces and implications of Medicare’s physician payment data Managing a small practice. Legislation creates timelines for FDA review 2011 Ozzie Silver Award, Best Redesign: Association/Non-profit. 2014 Eddie Honorable Mention, Association/ Non-profit video ACTA ERUDITORUM Laser litigation most common in nontraditional settings. DECODING DATA DIVORCED FROM CONTEXT A FASTER PIPELINE 2013 HOW InHOWse Design Award – Cover/Feature Design 16 34 40 2011, 2012, 2013, and 2014 Graphic Design USA Award – Cover/Feature Design. 2014 Graphic Design USA American Web Design Award ROUNDS AAD award winners. Sandy recollections. BY VICTORIA HOUGHTON 2014 AM&P Excel Bronze Award, Design Excellence 14 BY JAN BOWERS ANSWERS IN PRACTICE 46 FROM THE PRESIDENT 48 ACADEMY UPDATE Committee appointments, more. 52 FACTS AT YOUR FINGERTIPS Teen tanning dropped from 2009 to 2013; sunscreen use flat. www.aad.org/dw HELP YOUR PATIENTS FIGHT Acne – with – Once-daily treatment of comedonal & inflammatory acne lesions Visit ONEXTON.com to help patients save with a $0 copay* *Offer valid for commercially insured patients only. See savings card for full eligibility Terms and Conditions. INDICATION ONEXTON (clindamycin phosphate and benzoyl peroxide) Gel, 1.2%/3.75% is indicated for the topical treatment of acne vulgaris in patients 12 years of age or older. IMPORTANT SAFETY INFORMATION • ONEXTON Gel is contraindicated in patients with a known hypersensitivity to clindamycin, benzoyl peroxide, any component of the formulation, or lincomycin. • ONEXTON Gel is contraindicated in patients with a history of regional enteritis, ulcerative colitis, or antibiotic-associated colitis. • Diarrhea, bloody diarrhea, and colitis (including pseudomembranous colitis) have been reported with the use of topical and systemic clindamycin. ONEXTON Gel should be discontinued if significant diarrhea occurs. • Orally and parenterally administered clindamycin has been associated with severe colitis, which may result in death. • Anaphylaxis, as well as other allergic reactions leading to hospitalizations, has been reported in postmarketing use of products containing clindamycin/benzoyl peroxide. If a patient develops symptoms • • • • • of an allergic reaction such as swelling and shortness of breath, they should be instructed to discontinue use and contact a physician immediately. The most common local adverse reactions experienced by patients in clinical trials were mild and moderate erythema, scaling, itching, burning and stinging. ONEXTON Gel should not be used in combination with erythromycin-containing products because of its clindamycin component. ONEXTON Gel should be used during pregnancy only if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk to the fetus. A decision should be made whether to use ONEXTON Gel while nursing, taking into account the importance of the drug to the mother. Patients should be advised to avoid contact with the eyes or mucous membranes. Patients should minimize exposure to natural and avoid artificial sunlight (tanning beds or UVA/B treatment) while using ONEXTON Gel. To minimize exposure to sunlight, protective clothing should be worn and a sunscreen with SPF 15 rating or higher should be used. Please see Brief Summary of Prescribing Information on the following page. /TMs are trademarks of Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc. or its affiliates. Any other product or brand names and logos are the property of their respective owners. © 2015 Valeant Pharmaceuticals North America LLC. DM/ONX/15/0036 ® S:6.75” BRIEF SUMMARY OF FULL PRESCRIBING INFORMATION Neuromuscular Blocking Agents This Brief Summary does not include all the information needed to use ONEXTON Gel safely and effectively. See full prescribing information for ONEXTON Gel. Clindamycin has been shown to have neuromuscular blocking properties that may enhance the action of other neuromuscular blocking agents. ONEXTON Gel should be used with caution in patients receiving such agents. ONEXTON™ (clindamycin phosphate and benzoyl peroxide) Gel, 1.2%/3.75%, for topical use Initial U.S. Approval: 2000 CONTRAINDICATIONS Hypersensitivity ONEXTON Gel is contraindicated in those individuals who have shown hypersensitivity to clindamycin, benzoyl peroxide, any components of the formulation, or lincomycin. Anaphylaxis, as well as allergic reactions leading to hospitalization, has been reported in postmarketing use with ONEXTON Gel [see Adverse Reactions] WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS Colitis/Enteritis Systemic absorption of clindamycin has been demonstrated following topical use of clindamycin. Diarrhea, bloody diarrhea, and colitis (including pseudomembranous colitis) have been reported with the use of topical and systemic clindamycin. If significant diarrhea occurs, ONEXTON Gel should be discontinued. Severe colitis has occurred following oral and parenteral administration of clindamycin with an onset of up to several weeks following cessation of therapy. Antiperistaltic agents such as opiates and diphenoxylate with atropine may prolong and/or worsen severe colitis. Severe colitis may result in death. Studies indicate toxin(s) produced by Clostridia is one primary cause of antibiotic-associated colitis. The colitis is usually characterized by severe persistent diarrhea and severe abdominal cramps and may be associated with the passage of blood and mucus. Stool cultures for Clostridium difficile and stool assay for C. difficile toxin may be helpful diagnostically. Ultraviolet Light and Environmental Exposure Minimize sun exposure (including use of tanning beds or sun lamps) following drug application [see Nonclinical Toxicology]. ADVERSE REACTIONS The following adverse reaction is described in more detail in the Warnings and Precautions section of the label: Colitis [see Warnings and Precautions]. Table 1: Local Skin Reactions - Percent of Subjects with Symptoms Present. Results from the Phase 3 Trial of ONEXTON Gel 1.2%/3.75% (N = 243) Before Treatment (Baseline) Maximum During Treatment End of Treatment (Week 12) Mild Mod.* Severe Mild Mod.* Severe Mild Mod.* Severe Erythema 20 6 0 28 5 <1 15 2 0 Scaling 10 1 0 19 3 0 10 <1 0 Itching 14 3 <1 15 3 0 7 2 0 Burning 5 <1 <1 7 1 <1 3 <1 0 Stinging 5 <1 0 7 0 <1 3 0 <1 *Mod. = Moderate Postmarketing Experience Because postmarketing adverse reactions are reported voluntarily from a population of uncertain size, it is not always possible to reliably estimate their frequency or establish a causal relationship to drug exposure. Anaphylaxis, as well as allergic reactions leading to hospitalizations, has been reported in postmarketing use of products containing clindamycin phosphate/benzoyl peroxide. DRUG INTERACTIONS Erythromycin Avoid using ONEXTON Gel in combination with topical or oral erythromycincontaining products due to its clindamycin component. In vitro studies have shown antagonism between erythromycin and clindamycin. The clinical significance of this in vitro antagonism is not known. Concomitant Topical Medications Concomitant topical acne therapy should be used with caution since a possible cumulative irritancy effect may occur, especially with the use of peeling, desquamating, or abrasive agents. If irritancy or dermatitis occurs, reduce frequency of application or temporarily interrupt treatment and resume once the irritation subsides. Treatment should be discontinued if the irritation persists. Nursing Mothers It is not known whether clindamycin is excreted in human milk after topical application of ONEXTON Gel. However, orally and parenterally administered clindamycin has been reported to appear in breast milk. Because of the potential for serious adverse reactions in nursing infants, a decision should be made whether to use ONEXTON Gel while nursing, taking into account the importance of the drug to the mother. Pediatric Use Safety and effectiveness of ONEXTON Gel in pediatric patients under the age of 12 have not been evaluated. Geriatric Use Clinical trials of ONEXTON Gel did not include sufficient numbers of subjects aged 65 and older to determine whether they respond differently from younger subjects. NONCLINICAL TOXICOLOGY Carcinogenesis, Mutagenesis, Impairment of Fertility Carcinogenicity, mutagenicity and impairment of fertility testing of ONEXTON Gel have not been performed. Benzoyl peroxide has been shown to be a tumor promoter and progression agent in a number of animal studies. Benzoyl peroxide in acetone at doses of 5 and 10 mg administered topically twice per week for 20 weeks induced skin tumors in transgenic Tg.AC mice. The clinical significance of this is unknown. Carcinogenicity studies have been conducted with a gel formulation containing 1% clindamycin and 5% benzoyl peroxide. In a 2-year dermal carcinogenicity study in mice, treatment with the gel formulation at doses of 900, 2700, and 15000 mg/kg/day (1.8, 5.4, and 30 times amount of clindamycin and 2.4, 7.2, and 40 times amount of benzoyl peroxide in the highest recommended adult human dose of 2.5 g ONEXTON Gel based on mg/m2, respectively) did not cause any increase in tumors. However, topical treatment with a different gel formulation containing 1% clindamycin and 5% benzoyl peroxide at doses of 100, 500, and 2000 mg/kg/day caused a dose-dependent increase in the incidence of keratoacanthoma at the treated skin site of male rats in a 2-year dermal carcinogenicity study in rats. In an oral (gavage) carcinogenicity study in rats, treatment with the gel formulation at doses of 300, 900 and 3000 mg/kg/day (1.2, 3.6, and 12 times amount of clindamycin and 1.6, 4.8, and 16 times amount of benzoyl peroxide in the highest recommended adult human dose of 2.5 g ONEXTON Gel based on mg/ m2, respectively) for up to 97 weeks did not cause any increase in tumors. In a 52-week dermal photocarcinogenicity study in hairless mice, (40 weeks of treatment followed by 12 weeks of observation), the median time to onset of skin tumor formation decreased and the number of tumors per mouse increased relative to controls following chronic concurrent topical administration of the higher concentration benzoyl peroxide formulation (5000 and 10000 mg/kg/day, 5 days/week) and exposure to ultraviolet radiation. Clindamycin phosphate was not genotoxic in the human lymphocyte chromosome aberration assay. Benzoyl peroxide has been found to cause DNA strand breaks in a variety of mammalian cell types, to be mutagenic in S. typhimurium tests by some but not all investigators, and to cause sister chromatid exchanges in Chinese hamster ovary cells. Fertility studies have not been performed with ONEXTON Gel or benzoyl peroxide, but fertility and mating ability have been studied with clindamycin. Fertility studies in rats treated orally with up to 300 mg/kg/day of clindamycin (approximately 120 times the amount of clindamycin in the highest recommended adult human dose of 2.5 g ONEXTON Gel, based on mg/m2) revealed no effects on fertility or mating ability. PATIENT COUNSELING INFORMATION See FDA-approved patient labeling (Patient Information). Distributed by: Valeant Pharmaceuticals North America LLC, Bridgewater, NJ 08807 Manufactured by: Contract Pharmaceuticals Limited Mississauga, Ontario, Canada L5N 6L6 U.S. Patents 5,733,886 and 8,288,434 Issued 11/2014 9389300 DM/ONX/14/0031(1) S:9.75” Clinical Trials Experience Because clinical trials are conducted under widely varying conditions, adverse reaction rates observed in clinical trials of a drug cannot be directly compared to rates observed in the clinical trials of another drug and may not reflect the rates observed in clinical practice. These adverse reactions occurred in less than 0.5% of subjects treated with ONEXTON Gel: burning sensation (0.4%); contact dermatitis (0.4%); pruritus (0.4%); and rash (0.4%). During the clinical trial, subjects were assessed for local cutaneous signs and symptoms of erythema, scaling, itching, burning and stinging. Most local skin reactions either were the same as baseline or increased and peaked around week 4 and were near or improved from baseline levels by week 12. The percentage of subjects that had symptoms present before treatment (at baseline), during treatment, and the percent with symptoms present at week 12 are shown in Table 1. USE IN SPECIFIC POPULATIONS Pregnancy Pregnancy Category C. There are no adequate and well-controlled studies in pregnant women treated with ONEXTON Gel. ONEXTON Gel should be used during pregnancy only if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk to the fetus. Animal reproductive/developmental toxicity studies have not been conducted with ONEXTON Gel or benzoyl peroxide. Developmental toxicity studies of clindamycin performed in rats and mice using oral doses of up to 600 mg/kg/day (240 and 120 times amount of clindamycin in the highest recommended adult human dose based on mg/m2, respectively) or subcutaneous doses of up to 200 mg/kg/day (80 and 40 times the amount of clindamycin in the highest recommended adult human dose based on mg/m2, respectively) revealed no evidence of teratogenicity. cracking the code coding tips BY ALEXANDER MILLER, MD Nail it ALEXANDER MILLER, MD, addresses important coding and documentation questions each month in Cracking the Code. Dr. Miller, who is in private practice in Yorba Linda, California, represents the American Academy of Dermatology on the AMA-CPT® Advisory Committee. A prospective patient opens a top freezer door, reaches for ice cream, but in the process dislodges a frozen chicken that tumbles out, falling directly upon a bare big toe. A painful subungual hematoma leads to a frantic visit to you, the patient’s established dermatologist. Lacking a drill but being well stocked with paper clips, you unwind a paper clip, heat its tip with a lighter used for KOH slide preps, and gently burn through the nail plate, liberating a geyser of dark blood and immediately relieving the pain. You then bill for the procedure with Current Procedure Terminology (CPT) code 10140, “Incision and drainage of hematoma, seroma or fluid collection”. You did an exquisitely effective therapeutic procedure, but did you bill correctly? The CPT indicates that one should select a code that most accurately specifies, rather than approximates, a performed service. One finds that the CPT has a section devoted to nail procedures: CPT 11720 – 11765, which lists the following code: 11740, Evacuation of subungual hematoma. Thus, the more precise code 11740, rather than 10140, should have been used to characterize the hematoma extrusion in the above vignette. The “Nails” section of the CPT lists nail-specific procedural codes. The following is a list extracted from the CPT®. 11720 Debridement of nail(s) by any method(s); 1-5 11721 6 or more 11730 Avulsion of nail plate, partial or complete, simple; single 11732 each additional nail plate (List separately in addition to code for primary procedure) 11740 Evacuation of subungual hematoma 11750 Excision of nail and nail matrix, partial or complete (eg, ingrown or deformed nail), for permanent removal; 11752 with amputation of tuft of distal phalanx 11755 Biopsy of nail unit (eg, plate, bed, matrix, hyponychium, proximal and lateral nail fold(s) (separate procedure) 11760 Repair of nail bed 11762 Reconstruction of nail bed with graft 11765 Wedge excision of skin of nail fold (eg, for ingrown toenail) Example 1: You obtain a smear swab from the proximal nail fold area of an exudative paronychia on a commercially insured patient and do an in-office KOH processing and examination of the specimen for the presence or absence of Candidal organisms. You bill CPT 87220 for the KOH examination. Answer: Incorrect. The CPT lists two potential codes for KOH processing. CPT 87220 is for skin, hair, or nails tissue KOH slide examination. In this case the specimen is of a wet mount smear of exudate, rather than of actual tissue. Consequently, the more appropriate CPT code is 87210, “wet mount for infectious agents (e.g., saline, India ink, KOH preps).” Example 2: You obtain the same swab specimen as in Example 1, but from a Medicare insured patient. You bill the Medicare Administrative Contractor the Healthcare Common Procedure System (HCPCS) code Q0112, as Medicare preferentially recognizes this code, published in the HCPCS manual. DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 7 cracking the code continued coding tips Answer: Correct. HCPCS code Q0112 is defined as: “All potassium hydroxide (KOH) preparations”. This should be used for Medicare patients instead of the CPT code. Note that there is another HCPCS code, Q0111, defined as, “Wet mounts, including preparations of vaginal, cervical or skin specimens.” As in this example a KOH examination was done, code Q0112 is the appropriate choice. Example 3: A patient’s great toenail contains white spots of uncertain cause. Are they caused by white superficial onychomycosis, or are they leukonychia due to trauma? You use nail nippers to remove a portion of the affected nail plate and submit it for histologic processing and PAS staining for fungus identification. You bill CPT 11755 for the nail biopsy and 88312-26 for the professional component of interpretation and report of a Group I for microorganisms PAS special stain. Answer: Incorrect. CPT code 11755 describes “Biopsy of nail unit (eg, plate, bed, matrix, hyponychium, proximal and lateral nail folds) (separate procedure).” The October 2004 CPT Assistant, page 14, indicates that this biopsy procedure code is not appropriate for reporting the production of nail clippings or scrapings for fungal cultures, KOH preps, or stains including PAS. Obtaining pieces of nail is included in the evaluation and management process and is not separately billable. Histologic processing, including the preparation of PAS stained nail on a microscope slide and interpretation, are separately billable with CPT 88312 global, appended TC for the technical component only, or appended 26 for the professional component, including the generation of a report. Example 4: You relieve pain and tenderness caused by thick, yellowed, dystrophic great toe nails by debriding and trimming the nails with nail nippers, process some of the clippings for KOH prep examination, and send others for a fungal culture. You then bill CPT 11720 for the debridement and 87220 (or HCPCS Q0112 for Medicare patients) for the KOH prep. Answer: Correct. CPT 11720 indicates “Debridement of nail(s) by any method(s); 1 to 5.” This includes the debridement of fungal infected nails, hypertrophic nails, and dystrophic nails. This code does not relate to what is done with the removed nail portions. However, if those are sent for further examination, such as KOH prep processing, then the appropriate code for the laboratory procedure should be specified. Example 5: You remove the entire lateral longitudinal length of a painful ingrown toenail and cauterize the nail matrix of the removed portion of nail with phenol. You bill CPT 11750, “Excision of nail and nail matrix, partial or complete,” for the nail removal and matrixectomy. Answer: Correct. Although the procedure that was done did not include an actual excision of the matrix, CPT code 11750 is appropriate. This is corroborated in the CPT Assistant, December 2002, page 4, which states that code 11750 includes a destruction of the matrix with surgical, laser, electrocautery, or chemical techniques. Example 6: Your dear friend with excellent insurance pops in with a traumatic partial nail avulsion and laceration of the distal dorsal finger extending into the nail bed. You remove the nail and meticulously sew together the nail bed as well as the laceration on the adjoining proximal finger. You bill CPT 11760, repair of nail bed, to insurance. Answer: Partially Correct. In addition to repairing the nail bed, specified with CPT 11760, you also repaired the dorsal finger skin beyond that of the nail unit. It is appropriate to separately code for this procedure with a simple, intermediate, or complex repair code corresponding to the complexity and measured length of the repair. As in all cases, the assignment of a CPT code does not guarantee reimbursement, as individual insurance company coverage criteria must be met in order to qualify for payment. Some Medicare Administrative Contractors maintain Local Coverage Determinations (LCD) specifically dealing with nail debridement. Example 7: You avulse the nail in order to expose a nail bed lesion and do an incisional biopsy that you suture shut. You bill CPT 11730 for the nail plate avulsion and 11755 for the nail unit biopsy. Answer: Incorrect. Only CPT 11755 should be billed, as the nail plate avulsion (and replacement, if done) is included in the 11755 code descriptor, which also includes suturing of the biopsied tissue (CPT Assistant, October 2004). dw 8 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw Prescribe Finacea first ® © 2014 Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Bayer, the Bayer Cross, Finacea and the Finacea logo are registered trademarks of Bayer. All rights reserved. PP-825-US-0202 | September 2014 rounds Academy honors member contributions to dermatology E very year, the Academy recognizes the invaluable contributions of its members through a number of prestigious awards. Below, Dermatology World profiles this year’s recipients of several of these awards. Learn more about the Academy’s awards, grants, and scholarships at www.aad.org/members/awards-grants-scholarships. – VICTORIA HOUGHTON June K. Robinson, MD, wins Academy Gold Medal IN RECOGNITION OF HER VISIONARY LEADERSHIP in dermatology, strong focus on skin cancer prevention and detection, and dedication as an educator, clinician, and editor, June K. Robinson, MD, has earned the American Academy of Dermatology’s Gold Medal award. Dr. Robinson currently serves as research professor of dermatology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. She received this award for her past work as secretary-treasurer and member of the AAD’s Board of Directors, her exemplary service as a past president of the American Cancer Society – Illinois Division, the Women’s Dermatologic Society, the American Society for Dermatologic Surgery, and for her many roles at Loyola University Chicago, Northwestern University Medical School, Northwestern Medical Faculty Foundation, and the Northwestern Memorial Hospital Cancer and Research Committees. Dr. Robinson is also the current editor of JAMA Dermatology (formerly Archives of Dermatology) and an editor for Surgery of the Skin: Procedural Dermatology and the Cancer of Skin as well as the author of more than 170 peer-reviewed publications and numerous textbook chapters. The Gold Medal award is the Academy’s highest honor. 10 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 Academy’s Master Dermatologist awarded to Roy S. Rogers III, MD IN RECOGNITION OF HIS EXTENSIVE RESEARCH, teachings, and publications, Roy S. Rogers III, MD, has earned the Academy’s Master Dermatologist Award. Dr. Rogers serves as professor of dermatology at the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and a consultant in dermatology at the Mayo Clinic in Arizona. Dr. Rogers served as dean of students and then academic dean of the Mayo Medical School from 1982 to 1989, and then served as dean of the Mayo School of Health-Related Sciences for 10 years. He was recognized as a Distinguished Educator by Mayo Clinic Rochester in 2004. He is recognized as an authority in oral medicine, pathology, and dermatology and has edited three volumes of the Dermatology Clinics and co-authored three books and many scholarly publications. Dr. Rogers has taught in 55 countries and has been recognized by the International League of Dermatological Societies for his dedication to international dermatological education. The Master Dermatologist award started 30 years ago and recognizes an Academy member who, throughout the span of his or her career, has made significant contributions to the specialty of dermatology, as well as to the leadership and/or educational programs of the American Academy of Dermatology. www.aad.org/dw celebrating members Ali Jabbari, MD, PhD, and John Harris, MD, PhD, receive Young Investigators in Dermatology awards ALI JABBARI, MD, PHD, AND JOHN HARRIS, MD, PHD, have received the 2015 Young Investigators in Dermatology awards. The awards recognize outstanding basic and clinical/translational research by young dermatology investigators in the U.S. and Canada, and the dermatology departments that support their efforts. The purpose of the award is to acknowledge a winner’s research contribution that furthers the improvement of diagnosis and therapeutics in the practice and science of dermatology. Dr. Jabbari conducted a study to better understand the cellular and molecular drivers of alopecia areata in order to determine new therapeutic targets. The study showed that two drugs — ruxolitinib and tofacitinib — not only prevented the development of alopecia but, when used as a topical, were effective in treating alopecia. Dr. Jabbari currently serves as assistant professor of dermatology at Columbia University Medical Center. He received his medical degree and doctorate in immunology at the University of Iowa, Carver College of Medicine, and completed his dermatology residency at New York University. Dr. Harris conducted a study to identify the pathways involved in the development of vitiligo to develop new treatments for the disease. The study showed that deactivating the CXCL10 protein, or obstructing its receptor CXCR3, is a “promising treatment strategy” for patients with vitiligo. Dr. Harris currently serves as assistant professor in the department of medicine in the division of dermatology at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, and is also director of the Vitiligo Clinic and Research Center at UMass. He received his medical degree and doctorate in molecular medicine at UMass, and completed his dermatology residency at the University of Pennsylvania. DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 11 rounds continued Advocate of the Year award goes to Alex Gross, MD IN RECOGNITION OF HIS OUTSTANDING COMMITMENT to advocating on behalf of patients and the specialty in Georgia and at the federal level, Alex Gross, MD, has been selected as the 2014 Advocate of the Year. Each year, the Academy recognizes a member who undertakes a significant amount of grassroots advocacy activities at the state and/or federal level, on behalf of the specialty. Dr. Gross was instrumental in the passing of legislation that requires non-physicians who operate cosmetic lasers to be licensed and shepherded successful passage of Georgia’s under-14 indoor tanning restrictions. Dr. Gross is the current president of the Georgia Society of Dermatology and Dermatologic Surgery, and is in private practice in Cumming, Georgia. Robert Kirsner, MD, honored with Thomas G. Pearson Award ROBERT KIRSNER, MD, IS THE 2015 RECIPIENT of the Academy’s prestigious Thomas G. Pearson, EdD, Memorial Education Award. The Pearson Award recognizes a member of the Academy who has advanced the organization’s educational mission through significant contribution of time, development of educational programs, coordination of educational activities, and more. Dr. Kirsner has been integral in the development of many continuing medical education and maintenance of certification activities. Dr. Kirsner is the chair of the Academy’s Council on Education and Maintenance of Certification, and held the endowed Stiefel Laboratories chair in dermatology in the department of dermatology and cutaneous surgery at the University of Miami’s Miller School of Medicine, until recently, when he was appointed interim chair of the department of dermatology and became the Harvey Blank Professor. He currently serves as director of the University of Miami Hospital Wound Center and chief of dermatology at the University of Miami Hospital. Dr. Kirsner serves on the editorial boards for a number of journals including the JID, JAMA Dermatology, and Wound Repair and Regeneration. Established in 2002, the Pearson Award also serves as a memorial to the late Dr. Thomas G. Pearson, who served as the Academy’s director of education from 1987 to 2001. 12 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw celebrating members Arnold P. Gold Foundation for Humanism in Medicine award goes to James O. Ertle, MD IN RECOGNITION OF HIS COMMITMENT to compassionate, patient-centered care, James O. Ertle, MD, has received the Arnold P. Gold Foundation award. Dr. Ertle has been in private practice in Hinsdale, Illinois and on the faculty of Rush Medical School for 40 years. In 2003, Dr. Ertle established an AAD program dedicated to providing care in Haiti twice per year. Additionally, Dr. Ertle served as president of the Chicago, Illinois, and Great Lakes dermatological societies, and was instrumental in the passage of laws in Illinois regulating indoor tanning and tattoo parlors. The Arnold P. Gold Foundation began more than 20 years ago with the goal of restoring a more effective balance between the cutting-edge science of medicine and compassionate patient care. The foundation’s main objective is to ensure that physicians become mindful of the life context of health and illness, and become skillful in the habit of humanism, or how to communicate effectively and empathically to help patients heal. Jonathan Weiss, MD, earns Rising Star in Education award JONATHAN WEISS, MD, HAS RECEIVED the Academy’s Rising Star in Education Award. This award is presented to a medical student, dermatology resident, or a doctor in a fellowship in recognition of exceptional contributions to the Academy’s continuing professional development program. Dr. Weiss is one of two chief residents in dermatology at the University of Miami/Jackson Memorial Hospital. Dr. Weiss began volunteering with the Academy in 2012 as a resident editor for Dialogues in Dermatology, a role in which he has provided commentaries on issues including Technology Working for You, Skin Cancers in Organ Transplant Recipients, Update on the Treatment of Cutaneous T Cell Lymphoma, and Early Diagnosis of Melanoma. Dr. Weiss has also published a variety of papers. In 2011, Dr. Weiss’ abstract Primary mucinous carcinoma of the skin versus metastatic mucinous adenocarcinoma was accepted for oral presentation for the Gross and Microscopic symposium at the Annual Meeting. Dr. Weiss’s research interests include epidemiological research on racial disparities in sun-safe behaviors and outcomes in melanoma and non-melanoma skin cancers. His clinical interests include dermatologic/ Mohs surgery, the management of advanced non-melanoma skin cancers and skin cancers in transplant patients, as well as pigmented lesions/melanoma. Dr. Weiss aspires to establish a career in academic dermatology where he can focus on the above research and clinical interests as well as resident and medical student education. This award is only provided to those who have made exceptional contributions to the Academy’s educational program, and as such is not always awarded every year. DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 13 rounds continued news in brief Indoor tanning legislation builds on 2014 momentum STATE NEWS ROUNDUP IN 2014, THE AADA advocated for legislation in 26 states and the District of Columbia that would restrict indoor tanning for minors. By the end of the year, five states and the District of Columbia passed under-18 restrictions, and five other states had some form of age restriction — varying from parental consent requirements to under-17 bans. Legislatures across the country used that momentum to introduce a handful of under-18 bills in January. However, given the constraints of short legislative sessions, only six states have indoor tanning legislation in play. Bills that have been signed into law In Idaho, existing law prohibits minors from getting tattoos, body piercings, or brandings without parental consent and prohibits them entirely for minors under 14. Working closely with the Idaho dermatologists, the Idaho Medical Association (IMA) was successful in passing legislation to add indoor tanning to that statute. The AADA provided strategic guidance and resources to IMA and the state society. Bills that have passed out of committee A coalition has formed in Maine to advocate for under-18 legislation that includes the Maine Dermatological Society, the Maine chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Cancer Society-Cancer Action Network (ACS-CAN), and the Maine Medical Association. The AADA has been actively engaged in its support of the bill, activating grassroots and sending a letter of support. The bill passed a joint committee and awaits a vote before the full legislature. Similar legislation passed in 2013 but was vetoed by the governor. An under-18 bill in North Carolina has been reintroduced and passed committee. The bill passed the House in 2014 but was unable to gain traction in the Senate. Bills that have passed out of one chamber New Hampshire’s under-18 legislation has passed the House and will now face the Senate. Bills awaiting a committee or chamber vote Legislation in Oklahoma and Kansas would restrict minors under 18 from indoor tanning. Legislation in Florida would also restrict minors under the age of 18, but contains an exemption if the minor has obtained a physician prescription. These bills have not moved yet. Bills that have died Under-18 legislation in Kentucky passed the House, but failed to receive action in the Senate before the session adjourned for the year. Iowa’s under-18 legislation passed out of both chambers’ committees, but an amended House version failed to receive a hearing before the state’s deadline. The Montana legislature considered two indoor tanning bills: an under-18 bill and a parental consent bill. The AADA actively supported the under-18 bill, but it died in committee. Under-18 legislation in Mississippi and Arizona died shortly after introduction as well. The AADA also worked with a large coalition in Maryland — that included MedChi, the Maryland Dermatologic Society, and the ACSCAN — to advance two under-18 bills. Despite the AADA’s targeted grassroots advocacy efforts and strong presence at committee hearings that included testimony from patients and two AADA members, the Senate legislation failed in committee, thus killing the House bill’s chances. The AADA initially supported under-18 legislation in South Dakota; however, the legislation was amended down to parental consent only, and failed in the full House. – VICTORIA PASKO dw 14 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw acta eruditorum Q&A Laser litigation most common in non-traditional settings IN THIS MONTH’S ACTA ERUDITORUM COLUMN, Physician Editor Abby S. Van Voorhees, MD, talks with Mathew Avram, MD, about his two recent articles, “FDA MAUDE data on complications with lasers, light sources, and energy-based devices” in Lasers in Surgery and Medicine and “Increased risk of litigation associated with laser surgery by nonphysician operators” in JAMA Dermatology. DR. VAN VOORHEES: Let’s start with your recent paper on the review of complications associated with lasers, light sources, and energy-based devices. All would agree that the use of non-invasive procedures has become increasingly popular, so understanding the risks associated with these procedures is of paramount importance. Let’s start by your telling us what database you utilized for your study. DR. AVRAM: We used the Manufacturer and User Facility Device Experience (MAUDE) database. This is the primary database with which the FDA gathers complications with medical devices. It is generated by reports by patients, physicians, and industry. MAUDE is an important database because it’s the largest one devoted to complications with lasers, light sources, and energy-based devices within the field of dermatology. Therefore it was important for us to take a look at the incidence of these complications and side effects and seek to determine which were the most common, and which were surprising, in order to educate physicians and non-physicians using these devices as to the relative risks associated with treating patients. DR. VAN VOORHEES: What did you find were the most common adverse events seen overall? Are there differences between the various types of instruments? DR. AVRAM: Laser hair removal had the most adverse events. This isn’t surprising because laser hair removal is the most common use of lasers in medicine. Depending on the devices, the wavelengths, or the light source devices that were being used, there were differences in the reported adverse side effects. This can be attributed to the design of the devices as well as the inappropriate use of these devices. It can be difficult to determine whether it’s the device or the operator that’s at fault. 16 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw research in practice DR. VAN VOORHEES: Did any one type of laser or light source have more medical device reports (MDRs) than the others? Is there any specific treatment type that had a greater risk? DR. AVRAM: We didn’t find red flags with regard to the different devices. The most important take-away from our review of the database is that there were a number of side effects for these devices related to dermatologic treatment, thus, it’s important to be aware that all of them carry some degree of side effects. While some of the devices have more inherent risk than others, it’s important to note that the inappropriate use of any of these devices, particularly in the hands of operators with less training and skill in the field, leads to a particularly high risk for adverse side effects. DR. VAN VOORHEES: How reliable is this data? Are physicians reporting their complications reliably? DR. AVRAM: While it’s a large and important database due to the sheer volume of reports within it, there are important limitations. First, it’s based on the reports of physicians, operators, and industry. It’s fair to say that many operators of these devices do not report all of the adverse side effects that occur. This alone detracts from the overall value of the data. Further, the reports vary with regard to their detail; unfortunately, some have little detail regarding the precise source of the side effect. Nevertheless, MAUDE is an important database to examine — it encompasses a huge number of treatments and is the largest registry of reported side effects in our field. It is crucial for understanding the methods for employing best practices for patient safety and avoiding common side effects with the use of lasers, light sources, and energy-based devices. DR. VAN VOORHEES: Now let’s switch to talking about your paper on trends seen associated with the use of laser surgery. You mention that the number of cases performed by non-physicians has expanded over the past decade or so. Has this change been substantial? Do you see it continuing? DR. AVRAM: The change in the proportion of non-physician operator (NPO) litigation has been explosive over a short period of time. There has been a tremendous increase in litigation against NPOs due to injuries that have occurred as a result of laser, light source, and energy-based device treatments of skin conditions. This trend is particularly alarming because it comes at a time when there are great differences as to the degree of government regulation regarding who can operate these devices and what supervision, if any, is required. These differences are governed by state law. DR. VAN VOORHEES: Who qualifies as an NPO? Were there differences among different non-physicians? DR. AVRAM: Any non-physician would fall into this classification, whether a nurse practitioner or physician assistant or an aesthetician or electrologist. In the legal database we queried, sometimes it was difficult to tease out the details. The information was not robust enough to generate reliable data differentiating among different types of NPOs. DR. VAN VOORHEES: Is the increase in litigation especially true with any specific types of laser procedures? DR. AVRAM: The most common source of injury is laser hair removal. This is in part true because it’s the most common use of lasers in medicine. But it’s important to note that the proportion of injuries that are happening within laser hair removal among NPOs is significantly out of proportion to the number of procedures that NPOs are performing. In other words, the trends for increasing litigation are not solely related to the fact that there are more of these procedures being performed; the growth in litigation is disproportionately taking place in situations where NPOs are performing the procedures. More people are getting injured and they’re suing. DR. VAN VOORHEES: As more physicians delegate these procedures to NPOs has there been a correlation in lawsuits? DR. AVRAM: There’s been an increase in the number of lawsuits as physicians have delegated these procedures. It’s important to note, though, that the largest growth in litigation associated with these procedures being delegated is among NPOs performing these procedures in non-traditional medical settings, such as medispas, where the amount of supervision, if any, is less than that found in a traditional physician’s office or hospital. That’s where we’re seeing the biggest growth. To be clear, these injuries are happening in all settings. They’re happening with dermatologists and plastic surgeons performing these procedures themselves. They’re happening more frequently when delegated to NPOs performing these procedures under supervision in medical practices. But they’re happening most commonly — alarmingly, but perhaps not surprisingly — in situations where there is less medical supervision, i.e., non-traditional settings such as medispas, where the amount of supervision is limited. dw DR. AVRAM is director of the Dermatology Laser and Cosmetic Center at Massachusetts General Hospital. His articles appeared in Lasers in Surgery and Medicine (2015 Feb;47(2):133-40. doi: 10.1002/lsm.22328. Epub 2015 Feb 4) and JAMA Dermatology (2014 Apr;150(4):407-11. doi: 10.1001/ jamadermatol.2013.7117). DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 17 legally speaking BY ROBERT M. PORTMAN, JD, MPP Power at the bargaining table ANTITRUST RISKS AND ALTERNATIVES FOR DERMATOLOGISTS EVERY MONTH, DERMATOLOGY WORLD covers legal issues in “Legally Speaking.” This month’s author, Robert M. Portman, JD, MPP, is a health care attorney with Powers Pyles Sutter & Verville PC in Washington, D.C. Portman is also outside general counsel for the AAD and AADA. D ermatologists, like most other physicians, are under tremendous economic pressures. Actual and threatened cuts in the Medicare reimbursement, along with parallel reductions in private insurance reimbursement, as well as burgeoning rules, regulations, and red tape have caused physicians generally, and AADA members particularly, to ask whether they can form unions or otherwise take collective action against Medicare or third-party payers. The goal or hope is to even the playing field in negotiations with Medicare and private payers. The reality is that these options raise serious risks under the antitrust laws. Other less legally risky options are available, including forming large IPAs or networks, organizing grassroots campaigns by physicians and patients, or simply educating physicians about their options. The federal government has also created a broad exception to the antitrust laws for medical groups and others combining efforts to form accountable care organizations (ACOs) formed under the Medicare Shared Savings Program developed pursuant to the Affordable Care Act. CAN DERMATOLOGISTS FORM UNIONS TO NEGOTIATE WITH THIRD-PARTY PAYERS? The federal antitrust laws prohibit contracts, combinations, and other collective actions among buyers or sellers of goods that restrain trade. These laws have regularly been interpreted to preclude collective negotiations by independent groups of professionals, including physicians. Indeed, attempts by physicians to collectively negotiate with HMOs and other payers have been a prime target of enforcement actions by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in recent years. Labor unions, through statutory exemptions in the federal labor laws, are permitted to collectively bargain on behalf of their members. But these exemptions apply only to employees. They do not cover independent contractors. In addition, unions may only bargain on behalf of non-supervisory employees. Thus, unions like the Union for American Physicians and Dentists may negotiate on behalf of physicians employed by hospitals, HMOs, clinics, and the like. In 1999, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ruled that residents and fellows in private hospitals may also bargain collectively. However, unions may not negotiate for self-employed physicians or physicians otherwise acting as independent contractors. Nor may they represent employed physicians with supervisory or managerial authority. 18 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw legal issues Many years ago, the American Medical Association created a quasi-union called Physicians for Responsible Negotiation or PRN. PRN is a physician-based labor organization of employed physicians whose members agree not to strike or withhold essential medical services. PRN, which has since been spun off into a separate entity, does not appear to have gained much of a foothold in the medical community, probably because it does not offer much, if anything, more than a state medical society or a specialty society in terms of advocating for physician interests. There is very little chance that the NLRB or the courts will interpret the labor laws to allow self-employed physicians to collectively negotiate with hospitals, managed care, or other similar entities. Indeed, the NLRB has already rejected union petitions to organize and represent independent physicians. Likewise, the FTC has taken the position that unions may not bargain on behalf of self-employed physicians. The FTC has also repeatedly attacked efforts by local medical societies and other loosely knit groups of physicians to bargain collectively with managed care companies on behalf of otherwise independent physicians. The fact that unions may collectively bargain only on behalf of residents, fellows, and employed physicians helps account for the fact that a very small percentage of physicians are members of unions today. Therefore, unions provide a very limited option for dermatologists who are in private practice or employed by non-union hospitals or academic medical centers. Unions might become a more viable option as more and more physicians give up private practice for hospital employment. Until then, physicians must look to other options. SHORT OF FORMING A UNION, HOW CAN DERMATOLOGISTS EVEN THE PLAYING FIELD WITH THIRD-PARTY PAYERS? Unions are not the only way for physicians to gain economic leverage against Medicare SUPREME COURT ANTITRUST RULING RESTRAINS STATES’ ABILITY TO ENFORCE SCOPE OF PRACTICE LIMITS A ruling by the Supreme Court in February (North Carolina State Bd. Of Dental Examiners v. FTC) could make it harder for state medical boards to enforce scope of practice limits on non-physicians — and expose physicians who serve on such boards to legal risk. The Court ruled that a medical board controlled by “active market participants” could not use the “state action” doctrine to avoid antitrust scrutiny. The decision is likely to lead to states asserting greater control over medical boards, which currently operate in a quasi-sovereign manner in many states; in the future they are likely to be organized as divisions of state health departments or similar agencies. They may also include fewer “active market participants” to avoid antitrust concerns. Moreover, the Court’s ruling in favor of the FTC is a win for that agency’s campaign to ensure that professional regulatory bodies like medical boards do not stifle competition in health care services — including competition between physicians and other providers. Physicians who serve on such boards or are considering serving may wish to protect themselves from potential liability by securing state obligations to defend and indemnify board members. or managed care. With respect to Medicare, the American Academy of Dermatology Association (AADA) and other medical societies are constantly working to advocate for more equitable reimbursement policies. In addition, physicians can engage in civil protests, such as marches, rallies, and short work slowdowns. They can also independently decide not to treat Medicare patients by opting out of the program, or they can limit the number of Medicare patients they treat. However, these actions must be taken carefully to ensure that each physician is acting independently and not as part of a group boycott. With respect to private payers, group practices can merge to increase their market power, provided they do not create a threat to competition in their geographic area by doing so. Alternatively, physicians can create or join IPAs or physician networks that meet the antitrust guidelines for the health care industry that were first issued by the Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission in 1994 and revised in 1996. For instance, under the guidelines, IPAs that use the so-called “messenger model” are not subject to antitrust enforcement. The messenger model involves the use of an appointed individual or entity to act as an intermediary between individual physician members and the payer. The messenger may not negotiate rates, but may present proposals by payers to individual members for their acceptance or rejection. An integrated physician network offers a more powerful option for physicians to collectively negotiate with managed care. Under the DOJ/FTC guidelines, the network will be protected from antitrust scrutiny if the members share substantial financial risk (e.g., by accepting capitation) and constitute less than either 20 or 30 percent of the physicians in the relevant geographic market practicing the same specialty, depending on whether the network is exclusive or not. In some limited circumstances, the network will be safe from antitrust scrutiny even if the members do not share substantial financial risk, DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 19 legally speaking continued as long as the network involves significant functional integration (e.g., utilization review and quality control features) and does not raise significant anticompetitive risks. Integrated physician networks can provide their members with substantial leverage against managed care companies and other payers when they are well organized and include a substantial number of physicians with large patient rosters. However, physician networks can also be difficult to organize and sustain, and too often do not produce substantial financial returns for their members. Short of joining IPA or networks, dermatologists can work through the AADA to advocate for legislation or regulations to prevent or punish managed care payment abuses or to fight Medicare cuts. Medical societies or other groups of physicians can also meet with private payers and try to educate them about the effects of restrictive reimbursement policies. These advocacy efforts do not implicate the antitrust laws as long as the societies or groups do not threaten to take coercive action against payers if they refuse to change their policies in the manner requested by the societies/ groups. The AADA and its dermatologist leaders have had great success over the years in counteracting threatened private payer policy changes that would have had serious adverse effects on AADA members and their patients in areas like narrowing networks, restricted criteria for performing Mohs surgery, and attempts to impose certification requirements for office-based surgery. In addition, medical societies and other groups of physicians can file lawsuits against private payers to fight abusive payment practices. For instance, state and national medical societies have filed several class action lawsuits on behalf of physicians seeking damages and injunctive relief against managed care companies who have engaged in patterns of downcoding, delayed payment, and other abuses. Most of 20 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 legal issues those cases have settled in ways that led to substantial improvements in the methods some private payers use to process claims and pay for medical services. WHAT ARE THE PROSPECTS FOR CREATING AN EXCEPTION TO THE ANTITRUST LAWS FOR COLLECTIVE BARGAINING BY PHYSICIANS WITH THIRD-PARTY PAYERS? Despite these alternatives, many physicians believe the only truly effective way of standing toe to toe with managed care is through collective bargaining. Thus, organized medicine has made concerted efforts in recent years to obtain federal and state legislation to permit collective bargaining by independent or self-employed physicians. For instance, bills have been proposed in the House of Representatives to permit collective bargaining by physicians through an exception to the federal antitrust laws, although such bills would not have permitted physicians to strike. Federal legislation has also been proposed to apply the so-called “rule of reason” standard to negotiations between a health plan and two or more physicians, and to award attorneys’ fees to substantially prevailing plaintiffs in certain actions against health plans that act unreasonably or in bad faith. None of these bills has come close to passing. At the state level, Texas passed a law allowing self-employed physicians to jointly negotiate patient care and other issues, including fees, with state supervision of the process. This law takes advantage of the “State Action Doctrine,” an exception to federal antitrust laws under which such laws do not apply to a state acting in its sovereign capacity or to private conduct that is mandated or actively supervised by a state. Similar legislation has been passed in New Jersey and Washington. These state laws are considered to be much more cumbersome than a federal exception as they require close state supervision of the collective negotiation process. HOW CAN PHYSICIANS FORM ACOS WITHOUT VIOLATING THE ANTITRUST LAWS? Dermatologists may be wondering whether they would be violating the antitrust laws by forming ACOs to collectively negotiate with third-party payers, hospital systems, and other purchasers of their services. The answer is that the Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice issued “safety zones” in 2012 that outline the circumstances in which otherwise independent physicians and other health care providers can form ACOs under the Medicare Shared Savings Program without violating the antitrust laws. (The specific requirements of the safety zones can be viewed in their entirety at www.justice. gov/atr/public/health_care/276458.pdf.) While joining an ACO may create a different set of concerns for dermatologists, being part of one does create the potential for collective negotiation and for dermatologists to be prepared as Medicare looks to pay for more services through alternative payment models. The Academy provides a wealth of information about ACO participation at www. aad.org/members/practice-and-advocacyresource-center/practice-arrangements-andoperations/aco-and-medical-homes/faqs. THE BOTTOM LINE In the absence of federal or state legislation, dermatologists will rarely be able to form unions to negotiate with managed care and other payers. Without the ability to collectively negotiate, physician unions can do little more than offer the same kind of advocacy provided by medical societies. Dermatologists should, therefore, focus their efforts on alternatives to unions, including creating large, integrated networks, supporting the efforts of the AADA to work for better reimbursement policies, as well as efforts to lobby for legislation at the state and federal level that allows for collective negotiations by groups of physicians, and supporting the efforts of patient advocacy groups (see From the President, p. 46, for more on this topic). dw www.aad.org/dw ceiling-mounted procedure light consultation zone caregiver rotates to the procedure zone supplies within reach procedure table rotation large equipment storage wireless controls RETHINK THE CLINICAL SPACE. Patient education. Consultation. Procedures. Where will you do all of this? Midmark can help. We have reengineered the concept of the dermatology room to combine consultation, counseling and procedures all within a seamlessly efficient, yet intimate environment. For more information, call 1-800-MIDMARK or visit midmark.com/RethinkDermatology Manufactured and/or distributed by Midmark Corporation. 1-800-MIDMARK Versailles, OH balance in practice BY VICTORIA HOUGHTON, ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR Sandy recollections THREE TIMES EACH YEAR, Dermatology World highlights the special interest or hobby of a dermatologist. This month DW talked to John Wolf, MD, MA, about how he balances his career in dermatology with his passion for collecting sand from around the world. Want to be featured, or know someone who should be? Email [email protected]. “The beauty of collecting anything is that you enjoy the object, but probably more than the object itself, you enjoy remembering where and when you collected it.” 22 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 I n his study at his home in Houston, John Wolf, MD, has amassed a vibrant cornucopia of memories. These memories are not pictures of various people, places, or objects. Rather, Dr. Wolf houses more than 100 glass bottles of sand from around the world. Dr. Wolf is currently professor and chair of the dermatology department at Baylor College of Medicine and practices at the Jamail Specialty Care Center in Houston. He started collecting sand when he was a Peace Corps doctor in the Marshall Islands in Micronesia for two years. Dr. Wolf lived on an atoll called Majuro and sailed to other atolls such as Likiep, Jaluit, and Ailinglaplap. “I saw many beautiful islands and beaches and got interested along the way in collecting sand. It was an embryonic activity at the time,” Dr. Wolf remembers. “Later, I started tying it in with travel. Wherever I traveled — to beaches in Hawaii, the Caribbean, or other parts of the world — I started collecting sand.” Dr. Wolf enjoys collecting in general. “I’m a collector. I have collections from pre-Columbian art to wine, masks, and Chinese fortune cookie aphorisms. I also like to travel.” Dr. Wolf has visited six of the seven continents and has lectured in 25 foreign countries. “Travel plus the instinct for collecting is what led me to perpetuate the sand collection.” From pink to black, each vial of sand is different and is labeled by date and location. Each serves as a token reminder for Dr. Wolf of the different experiences and events throughout his life and career as a physician. www.aad.org/dw management insights THE COLLECTION MARKING MEMORIES WITH SAND When Dr. Wolf travels and there is sand to collect, he will collect it. Dr. Wolf only takes a few ounces of sand, so as not to disturb the environment, and places it in plastic baggies to bring home. His wife purchases glass bottles of various sizes and shapes, and the vials are then filled, labeled, and placed on shelves in his home office. Several bottles are in his office at work as well. One of Dr. Wolf’s favorite samples is the sand he collected on St. John, in the U.S. Virgin Islands, where he and his wife were married. “The beauty of collecting anything is that you enjoy the object, but probably more than the object itself, you enjoy remembering where and when you collected it.” Dr. Wolf keeps most of his sand collection and other collectibles in his home office. White sand from Majuro and Whitehaven Beach, and black sand from Hawaii. THE COLLECTION CONNECTION WHITE SAND FROM MAJURO Dr. Wolf has collected a number of his specimens while traveling and lecturing about dermatology. The whitest sand in Dr. Wolf’s collection is from Whitehaven Beach on the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, which he collected when he was there for the World Congress of Dermatology meeting in 1997. The second whitest sand is from the island of Majuro (pictured here) where he did his stint as a Peace Corps doctor and started his interest in collecting sand. Dr. Wolf shows pictures of beaches around the world often during his lectures, and sometimes he brings sand to show the audience. “To me, the most important aspect of talking about dermatologists’ hobbies or extracurricular activities is to show that dermatologists are interesting people who like to do a lot of unusual things. You have dermatologists who collect art, wine, antique books, shells, minerals, and fossils. The overarching theme is that dermatologists don’t just do dermatology.” dw Sand from Majuro in a Zen garden reminds Dr. Wolf of his time in the Peace Corps. Pink sand from Guam, white sand from the Great Barrier Reef, and black sand from Hawaii. To see more of Dr. Wolf’s collection, visit www.aad.org/dw. DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 23 answers in practice Managing a small practice IN THIS MONTH’S Answers in Practice column, Dermatology World talks with Elizabeth S. Jacobson, MD, about managing a small practice and ensuring quality and timely patient experiences at Inverness Dermatology & Laser in Hoover, Alabama. DERMATOLOGY WORLD: Tell us about your practice. DR. JACOBSON: Inverness Dermatology & Laser now has three physicians, Shellie Marks, MD, Kathleen Beckum, MD, and me. We also have one physician assistant, Mary Beth Templin, PA-C, and 17 amazing staff members. Our practice sees about 150-180 patients per day. This number will increase as our third physician builds her practice. You were in a multi-specialty clinic for about seven years before starting your own practice. What inspired you to go the private practice route? DR. JACOBSON: I was hesitant to go out on my own because I was not experienced in business and was busy with three children, including a new baby. My former practice had wonderful patients and I enjoyed having interaction with the other multi-specialty doctors. However, I wanted to run a smaller practice where I had better control. The multi-levels of management of my former practice made improving efficiency difficult and I was extremely frustrated with the infrastructure of the practice. What challenges did you encounter in creating your own practice? DR. JACOBSON: In the middle of the recession — when obtaining financing was no easy task, even for a physician— we built a building and started a practice. At first, my top priority was getting patients to come to me. What if no one came?! We had our first and only employee scheduling patients on Yahoo scheduler from her cell phone before we had a building completed. We did everything from the ground up which was a lot of work and 24/7 for about two-and-a-half years. I even designed our first website (and I am not a computer person). We planned that I would not expect a salary for the first six to eight months. It was hard work and great fun designing the building, developing the practice, and deciding how we were going to do things. What are the advantages and disadvantages of running a small practice? DR. JACOBSON: The advantage is that you get to do things the way you want to do them. You get to try out your ideas and decide how you want to run that practice. That concept makes it sound like you are carefree and living the dream, but it actually comes with daunting responsibility. You really have to structure your practice to work well for your patients and your employees which is no easy feat. When it’s your practice you’re the one who always takes a pay cut when the money is short, you’re going to be the one who works extra hours or days when 24 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw management insights nobody else wants to, and you’re going to be the one to worry about the overflowing toilet when everyone has gone home on Friday. How have your hours changed since moving to a private practice from a multispecialty practice? DR. JACOBSON: I absolutely work longer hours. I’m doing more things on weekends and at night. When I am on vacation or choose to take a day to be the Mystery Reader at my child’s school, I am all too aware of the financial impact of my time away from work. My husband, Keith, is the practice administrator, so it could be 8:00 pm and we’re trying to watch Downton Abbey and I say “maybe we need to change this on the website” or something like that. It’s really part of our day-to-day life. Our kids observe us working together as parents and business partners and I think it is a unique situation for them as well. How do you and your other physicians ensure the practice has appropriate coverage? DR. JACOBSON: It’s very rare that one of us has to be out due to illness, but if that happens we just cover each other’s patients as best we can that day. We always try to have an MD in the office so the other physicians and I are almost never out at the same time. We don’t go to the same meetings for coverage reasons. We don’t take the same time off. We’re very good at working it out. We never have an issue where we all need to be out more than one or two days. How do you handle the administrative workload (meaningful use, PQRS) with a small staff? DR. JACOBSON: I found that if you can get the providers on board for the changes with the right attitude, then the staff follows as well. For example, when we switched to a new EHR system, we were able to switch completely from our old method of scanning our notes, to learning and implementing our new system in two weeks with no schedule reduction. It was a painful two weeks but we have benefited greatly from the change. It was having the right attitude and saying “we’re going to do this and it’s going to be great” and our staff followed this positive example. A provider that’s resistant and has a negative attitude about change will negatively influence the staff and lead to failure implementing a new idea. What are some time-management tactics that you and your staff employ? DR. JACOBSON: We play with the scheduling quite a bit to make improvements to the clinic flow. There are not a lot of static decisions. We are always changing, always evolving. A week doesn’t go by where someone doesn’t say “should we try this or perhaps change that?” We have “idea” contests in the office. Everyone comes up with three ways to improve the patient experience or an office process and if we implement your idea you win a gift card or pair of scrubs and are recognized for your contribution. I’ve practiced for 12 years, and staff comes up with things that I cannot believe I have not done before. For example, one of our employees suggested that we make the intake sheet follow exactly the questions on our EHR so we’re not skipping around entering information. It is a simple and easily implemented idea and it greatly increased our speed in triaging patients. Also, someone suggested we make all the emails from the website go to everyone on a single email so that anyone who has a few minutes can address a couple of emails. These are simple things that have made huge positive impacts on our practice! How do you gauge patient satisfaction? DR. JACOBSON: We occasionally survey patients on how can we make things better. We do receive complaints from patients and we try to use these complaints to make positive changes. We also get very nice comments and notes from patients and we put them in an album in a lobby. I think that is wonderful for new patients to start out with us with the thought that they will be treated well and that we truly care about them. As a small practice, what type of marketing do you employ? DR. JACOBSON: Having patients sent to us by word of mouth is our favorite way to get new patients. They are already coming to us because a current patient is happy with our care and that starts us out on the right foot. Nothing promotes our practice better than a current patient saying, “I really liked them. You should go to them.” What is the key to running a successful small practice? DR. JACOBSON: In addition to practicing medicine, while running a business you have to wear two hats and that’s very difficult without having a really great staff that you can rely on who pay attention to details and care for your patients. Without my office manager of seven years, Lindsey Schoenfeld, who manages our employees, billing, and basically every detail and hiccup in our dayto-day operation, we couldn’t have the business we have today. My husband — as the practice administrator — does the banking and accounting, dealing with vendors, managing banking issues, paying bills, managing employee benefits like our 401(k), profitsharing, health insurance, etc. He is excellent at managing this practice as a successful business. I believe that our practice is one of the most efficient and well-run practices. We are very good about staying on top of things and making sure that we are running things as efficiently as possible without cutting corners in providing excellent dermatologic care for our patients. What advice would you give a physician considering starting their own practice? DR. JACOBSON: I would recommend that everyone start at an established practice because I think you must first develop confidence in your clinical skills. It is also crucial to see how businesses are run because we’re not taught that in residency. I really benefited from having several years of observing the management of my former practice and developing my own ideas about how I wanted my practice to be. Dr. Jacobson is in private practice at Inverness Dermatology and Laser in Hoover, Alabama. dw DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 25 GARGANTUAN GROWING GENERIC PRICES Soaring prices force dermatologists to rethink common therapies 26 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw BY RUTH CAROL, CONTRIBUTING WRITER P rescribing treatments that best combine efficacy and affordability used to be as easy as prescribing a generic. But with the recent escalation of generic drug prices, dermatologists are finding themselves having to rethink some common treatment therapies, substituting them more often, and taking additional steps to assist their patients in obtaining the medications they need. Dermatologists are finding themselves broaching this topic more frequently with patients — something not all of them are comfortable doing. Meanwhile, the AAD staff and its Regulatory Policy Committee are conducting an environmental scan and analysis to define the problem, noted Adam Rubin, MD, committee chair. Although the soaring cost of generic medications is a problem throughout the house of medicine, the AAD is hearing from members that these steep price increases are making it increasingly difficult for their patients to afford their medications, he said. The AAD is forming a Task Force on Drug Pricing and Drug Pricing Transparency to gather specific data about how this problem is affecting dermatology in particular. “We need to move from anecdotal reports to defining the problem in order to have a comprehensive action plan,” Dr. Rubin said. >> DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 27 GARGANTUAN GROWING GENERIC PRICES DERMATOLOGISTS’ EXPERIENCES IMPACTING PATIENT CARE “Like many dermatologists around the country, I have increasingly experienced problems with the availability and wild price fluctuations for generic topical and oral medications that were previously inexpensive and easy to find,” noted Jack Resneck Jr., MD, professor and vice-chair of dermatology at the University of California San Francisco School of Medicine. “The frustration that my patients and I experience is exacerbated by the fact that some of these generic drugs seem to disappear from pharmacy shelves or skyrocket in price suddenly and without notice or any predictable patterns.” Like Dr. Resneck, many dermatologists have learned about price spikes or drug shortages from their patients who are trying to obtain a medication. This scenario leads to significant disruptions in clinical care, he noted. “It’s darn near impossible for doctors to try and stay current on what a drug costs. I end up relying on my patients to say that their insurance won’t cover a particular drug,” echoed Mary Maloney, MD, former chair of the AAD’s Regulatory Policy Committee and chief of the division of dermatology at the University of Massachusetts. “I didn’t know there was a tetracycline shortage until I tried prescribing it and a patient couldn’t get it.” Also increasing are the patients’ out-of-pocket expenses as pricier generics are being moved to a higher co-pay tier and dropped from discount generic drug programs. Dr. Rubin has noticed that insurance plans are rejecting fewer prescriptions as of late. In the past, an insurance plan might reject a prescription, but pay for a similar one on its formulary, he said. Now, the insurance covers the first-choice medication, but with a very high co-pay. As a result, Dr. Rubin has altered treatment plans based on the patient’s ability to pay for medications and substituted medications that may not be as efficacious. Although the significant cost increases bother Dr. Maloney, they haven’t stopped her from prescribing certain medications provided that the patient’s insurance covers it. As an example, Dr. Maloney continues to prescribe doxycycline as it is a tremendously effective drug for treating communityacquired Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus or MRSA. On the other hand, when the medication is not covered by insurance, and there are other treatment options, she will push topicals and hold off on prescribing an oral antibiotic, such as minocycline. TRACKING $KYROCKETING PRICE$ In the summer of 2013, Peter Reisfeld, MD, a former president of the Long Island Dermatologic Society (LIDS) and current treasurer of the New York State Society of Dermatology and Dermatologic Surgery (NYSSDDS), began noticing sharp price increases for generic topicals, particularly desonide, after receiving complaints from numerous patients. His pharmacist informed Dr. Reisfeld that the cost of several medications, many of which were dermatologics, was rising rapidly. To begin documenting the problem, he reviewed the federal database on the Medicaid.gov website that contains weekly surveys of pharmacy costs for tens of thousands of drugs. These surveys, which are dated and posted online as Excel spreadsheets, are used to help states calculate reimbursements for the Medicaid program, he explained. “By combining data from different dates, calculating ratios, and sorting the data, I was able to demonstrate the actual increases that were taking place,” said Dr. Reisfeld, who brought the issue to the attention of the NYSSDDS board of directors in September 2013. Three months later the data was posted to the LIDS website with a link from the NYSSDDS website. The data include cost information for topical dermatologics sorted by name, package cost, and price increase. Also available for download is a spreadsheet containing current pricing for all medications sorted alphabetically. This information will allow physicians “to accommodate the financial needs of patients with limited insurance coverage, and to maximize value for the healthcare system,” the website reads. Dr. Reisfeld also used the data as the basis of an editorial published in Cutis in January 2014. 28 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw “The good news is there are a lot of good drugs for treating acne, so I can substitute other medications,” Dr. Maloney said. She also relies on some tricks of the trade such as using a less potent topical steroid but wrapping the affected area with plastic wrap to increase the steroid’s penetration and strength. Dr. Maloney has stopped prescribing tetracycline. “It’s hard to imagine why tetracycline, which is dirt cheap to make, is now so expensive, that is, if you can find it,” she lamented. Peter Reisfeld, MD, has started to factor in the price of a medication in addition to its effectiveness. “If I can find a medication that is equivalent in effectiveness at a lower cost, that’s the one that I am going to prescribe,” he said. Within dermatology, there are many different generic medications that could be equivalent but at varying price points. “So you still have the ability to choose a less expensive generic if you know which ones are expensive,” Dr. Reisfeld said. These unpredictable price fluctuations have become part of the treatment discussion, which Dr. Rubin, for one, finds awkward. “It can be uncomfortable to talk to patients about their financial ability to pay for prescriptions. The ability to pay for medications can be linked with independent financial issues in other spheres of their lives.” he said. Still, Dr. Rubin does feel obligated to inform patients of the potential high cost of generic medications, which patients may not be expecting to be the case. Dr. Reisfeld is often amazed at how some of the costs have gone up so dramatically, he noted, as are many of the pharmacists he works with; patients whose insurance does not cover the increases are often discouraged or angry. Aside from increases in acquisition costs, another problem particularly for uninsured consumers is pharmacy markups, he said. Dr. Reisfeld recently prescribed topical imiquimod for a patient who called to say that it would cost $625 to fill the prescription at a large pharmacy chain. However, the pharmacy at Costco, which has a policy of charging a maximum 15 percent markup over its cost for generic medications, was selling the same prescription for $91. “When I’m prescribing a medication that is more costly and I know has a lot more variability in pricing, I will often tell the patient to shop around,” he said. “I think patients really appreciate when you’re trying to save them money.” REASONS CITED FOR THE SHORTAGE Dermatologists speculate that there may be myriad reasons for the price increases. High on the list of Using the same database, Philadelphia-based Pembroke Consulting released an analysis in August 2014 noting that half of all generic drugs sold through retailers had become more expensive during the past year, with a median increase of nearly 12 percent. Moreover, the cost of one out of 11 generics more than doubled, while the prices of others skyrocketed. Among the findings: the cost of a 500-milligram capsule of tetracycline rose from 5 cents to $8.59, representing a nearly 18,000 percent price hike, while a 250-mg capsule increased from 6 cents to $4.26, a more than 7,000 percent increase. The price of a 100-mg tablet of doxycycline hyclate rose from 6 cents per pill to $3.65. The cost of fluconazole rose from 14 cents to $1.50. The price of a 60-gm tube of generic desonide cream jumped from $26.75 to $248.04. When Dr. Reisfeld updated the data posted to the LIDS’s website in October 2014, he noted that tetracycline was still high on the list. With a 179-fold price increase during the past year, the monthly cost of 500-mg BID dosing jumped from $2.89 to $518. Other oral medications with dramatic increases include a 60-fold increase in the cost of captopril, a 26-fold rise in the price of amitryptyline, and a nearly 18-fold increase in the cost of carbamazepine. Certain formulations of topical clobetasol have had a nearly 20-fold increase, as well. The cost of a 45-gm tube of 0.025 percent generic tretinoin cream jumped from $25 to $150. A 45-gm tube of hydrocortisone valerate rose from $27 to $110. Many generic formulations of topical steroids have increased at least four-fold in the past two years, along with generic hydroquinone, clindamycin solution, and ciclopirox solution. This past December, the cost of econazole increased six-fold within a few months, Dr. Reisfeld added. DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 29 GARGANTUAN GROWING GENERIC PRICES possible culprits is industry consolidation. A significant number of mergers and takeovers have occurred in the pharmaceutical industry in recent years, leaving the market with fewer companies manufacturing generics, Dr. Rubin said. Less competition equals higher costs. “In 2010, four of the top generic manufacturers accounted for 50 percent of all generic prescriptions in the United States,” he said. Increased regulation by the FDA may both encourage producers to drop products or discourage new competitors, Dr. Reisfeld added. “Once prices go up, the huge FDA backlog on approval of new generics prevents competition which could bring prices back down.” Some manufacturers exit the market if the profit margins are insufficient, Dr. Maloney noted. They may abandon a drug if it is too difficult, costly, or time consuming to make. Manufacturing glitches and FDA crackdowns on manufacturing plants can cause both supply disruptions and production lapses. According to extensive research done by Erin Fox, PharmD, a professor in pharmacotherapy at the University of Utah, some of the factors making the supply chain so fragile include global outsourcing of raw materials, tighter supply inventories, consolidation of manufacturers and suppliers and a lack of manufacturing redundancy, business decisions to purposely limit production, and serious quality control problems leading to regulatory enforcement that may include factory shutdowns. BILL$ TO LOWER THE BILL Many members of Congress have introduced bills to address issues around generic drug pricing. As an example, Representatives Doug Collins (R-Ga.) and Dave Loebsack (D-Iowa) introduced the Generic Drug Pricing Fairness Act (H.R. 4437), which would provide further transparency of payment methods PBMs use to reimburse pharmacies for generic prescription drugs under Medicare Part D, and the MAC Transparency Act (H.R. 5815), which would extend the same remedies to the military’s TRICARE program and the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program. They are expected to re-introduce H.R. 5815 this year. Similarly, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services finalized a regulation in 2014 that would require PBMs, starting in 2016, to update generic pricing benchmarks used in Medicare drug plans every seven days. TRACKING $KYROCKETING PRICE$ Senators Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and John McCain (R-Ariz.) introduced drug importation legislation to help In the summer of 2013, Peter Reisfeld, MD, a former president of the Long Island Dermatologic Soreduce the costs of prescription drugs for American families. The Safe and Affordable Drugs from Canada ciety (LIDS) and current treasurer of the New York State Society of Dermatology and Dermatologic Act, which was re-introduced in January, would allow individuals to import prescription drugs from Canada. Surgery (NYSSDDS), began noticing sharp price increases for generic topicals, particularly desonide, after receiving complaints introduced from numerous patients. HisSenate pharmacist informed Dr. Reisfeld that the cost Sen. Sanders and Rep. Cummings legislation in the and House to require drug companies of several medications, many whichofwere was rising rapidly. to reimburse Medicaid if they raise theofprices theirdermatologics, generic drugs more quickly than inflation. Currently, drug companies are required to pay rebates to Medicaid when this occurs for brand name drugs. The MedicTo begin documenting the problem, he reviewed the federal database on the Medicaid.gov website aid Generic Drug Price Fairness Act, S. 2948 and H.R. 5748, would amend the law to extend this rebate provithat contains weekly surveys of pharmacy costs for tens of thousands of drugs. These surveys, which sion to generic drugs. The Congressional Budget Office suggests that this proposal would save the Medicaid are dated and posted online as Excel spreadsheets, are used to help states calculate reimbursements program $500 million during the next 10 years. for the Medicaid program, he explained. “By combining data from different dates, calculating ratios, and sorting data, I was able to demonstrate the actual increases thatthat were taking place,” said Dr. Sen. Klobuchar alsothe introduced legislation with Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) would give the Federal Reisfeld, who brought the issue to the attention of the NYSSDDS board of directors in September 2013. Trade Commission (FTC) more authority to stop the illegal pay for delay agreements whereby brand-name Three months later the data was posted to the LIDS website with a link from the NYSSDDS website. pharmaceutical companies pay generic drug companies to delay marketing lower cost generic drugs. These The data include information for of topical dermatologics sorted by package cost, and price agreements postpone thecost market availability generic drugs, on average, byname, 17 months. Sen. Klobuchar says increase. Also available for download is a spreadsheet containing current pricing for all medications that the Preserve Access to Affordable Generics Act could save $4.7 billion for the U.S. budget and $3.5 billion sorted alphabetically. This information will allow physicians “to accommodate the agreements financial needs for consumers. In FY 2013, 29 patent dispute settlements created potential pay-for-delay be-of patients with limited insurance coverage, and to maximize value for the healthcare system,” the website tween branded and generic drug companies, the FTC reported in December 2014. The 29 settlements involve reads. Dr. Reisfeld also used the as the basis ofU.S. an editorial in Cutis in billion. January 2014. 21 branded pharmaceutical products withdata combined annual sales ofpublished approximately $4.3 30 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw The most significant manufacturing glitch driving prices up is a raw material shortage, as in the case of tetracycline and doxycycline. As far back as two years ago, pharmaceutical manufacturers reported discontinuing production of tetracycline, some due to a lack of active ingredient and others for reasons that are unclear. The generic was reintroduced and both the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists and FDA reported that the shortage was resolved in March 2014. “Yet the price is still astronomical,” said Dr. Reisfeld, who is skeptical as to how much of a role material shortages play in these price spikes. Sometimes a drug suddenly escalates in price and then seems to vanish. “But they don’t really disappear,” he explained, “it’s just that independent pharmacies are leery to order them.” Since it can take several weeks for the third-party payers to increase their reimbursements, pharmacies that order a medication too soon can suffer substantial losses. Rather than taking the loss, the pharmacists say they just can’t get the medication, he said. LEGISLATIVE EFFORTS That is why in January 2014, the National Community Pharmacists Association (NCPA) asked congressional leaders to hold an oversight hearing to investigate the reasons behind the skyrocketing costs of generic drugs, which represent approximately 86 percent of all prescriptions dispensed in the U.S., according to a 2014 report by the IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics. In October 2014, Sen. Bernard Sanders (I-Vt.) and Rep. Elijah E. Cummings (D-Md.) launched an investigation, sending letters to 14 drug manufacturers requesting information from 2012 to the present, including total gross revenues from sales of the drugs, prices paid for the drugs, factors that contributed to decisions to increase prices, and the identity of company officials responsible for setting drug prices. At the November hearing of the Senate Subcomittee on Primary Health and Aging, an NCPA representative testified about the lag in reimbursement rates provided to pharmacists by pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) that have resulted in significant revenue losses. According to a member survey, NCPA found that nearly 86 percent of more than 1,000 pharmacists reported that it took PBMs or other third-party payers as long as six months to update their reimbursement rates to pharmacies, resulting in reimbursement rates significantly less than the acquisition costs. Moreover, several pieces of legislation, many of which were bipartisan, were introduced in Congress EHRS OFFER DRUG PRICING INFORMATION Electronic health records (EHRs) can inform dermatologists of what medications are on the patient’s formulary; some also indicate the cost. EMA, Modernizing Medicine’s EHR system, can indicate if a medication is on the patient’s formulary, and if so, what tier it’s on, said Michael Sherling, MD, the company’s medical director. Dermatologists can also give patients e-coupons if the pharmaceutical company is running a promotion. “Dermatologists want to prescribe drugs that their patients can afford because they know these drugs will get used,” he added. Nextech’s EHR also indicates if there is a generic alternative and displays the co-pay amount for the medication, noted David Henriksen, the company’s CEO. Prior authorization, which is the next step in the automation of electronic prescriptions, is becoming a significant issue as drug prices increase, he added. Although it won’t solve the skyrocketing costs, it will improve price transparency. “Prior authorization will move us from knowing what medications are on the formulary to what level on the formulary and how much is covered, and what the insurance carrier will approve if the drug isn’t on the formulary,” Henriksen said. “This helps dermatologists have a very open conversation with their patients about the drugs they’re prescribing and how much money their patients will have to pay out of pocket.” Peter Reisfeld, MD, noted that an EHR is a good tool for quickly accessing drug pricing information. “Usually they provide average wholesale prices, which are only an approximation of true costs,” he said, “but they still give you a good general idea about pricing.” DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 31 GARGANTUAN GROWING GENERIC PRICES last year. (See sidebar for a description of the various bills.) But as Dr. Rubin put it, “Unless the legislation is ultimately signed into law, it is just a discussion.” Dr. Reisfeld believes that legislative efforts might reduce drug costs for a select patient population, but will not resolve the problem. He is also concerned that legislation may limit the potential benefits to suppliers, risking driving more of them out of the market, which could worsen the problem. But before devising a solution, the causes behind the escalating costs of generic drugs have to be determined. “The first thing I would recommend is an expert economic analysis because there is still quite a bit of murkiness as to exactly what is responsible,” said Dr. Reisfeld, who is not optimistic that the drug companies will cooperate given that they refused to testify at the recent congressional hearing. (Similarly, drug companies contacted for this article did not respond to interview requests or written questions.) doesn’t work well to keep generic medication prices down is that insurance reimbursement insulates patients from the high prices, Dr. Reisfeld explained. Consequently, demand remains high. “If physicians become more familiar with drug pricing, then they will be in a better position to choose treatments that are effective without being overpriced,” he said. “Reduced demand from physician prescribing may help to actually bring prices down. That way we can help to protect both the medical and the financial health of our patients.” Dr. Reisfeld encourages dermatologists to talk to their local pharmacists about the price surge, check their e-prescribing programs for drug pricing information, and/or download the drug database posted on the LIDS website (see sidebar, “Tracking skyrocketing prices”). “We will need to be more proactive in becoming more educated about pricing of medications,” Dr. Rubin concurred. dw WHAT CAN DERMATOLOGISTS DO? In the meantime, there is one thing that physicians can do. One of the reasons that supply and demand PAYING LE$$ FOR GENERIC$ TRACKING $KYROCKETING PRICE$ With the cost of prescriptions factoring more into the conversation about treatment options these days, dermatologists can offer their patients some money-saving advice. Simply put, it may pay to shop around. In the summer of 2013, Peter Reisfeld, MD, a former president of the Long Island Dermatologic So(LIDS) and current treasurer of the New York State Society of Dermatology and Dermatologic Several ciety national retailers and grocers offer discount generic drug programs for individuals who either Surgery (NYSSDDS), noticing sharp price increases generic topicals,Among particularly don’t have insurance or theirbegan insurance doesn’t adequately cover for their medications. them desonide, are CVS, after receiving from Rite numerous patients. His informed Dr. programs Reisfeld that Good Neighbor, K-Mart,complaints Kroger, Target, Aid, Walgreens, andpharmacist WalMart. Many of these do the not cost of several medications, many of which weretodermatologics, was rising rapidly. have complex eligibility requirements, applications fill out, or a long-term commitment akin to Medicare Part D. The Walgreens Prescription Savings Club and the CVS Health Savings Pass, however, do have an anTo begin documenting theWalmart, problem, for he reviewed federal database on prescription; the Medicaid.gov nual membership fee. Target and example, the charge $4 for a 30-day $10 website for a 90-day that contains weekly surveys of pharmacy costs for tens of thousands of drugs. These surveys, which supply of gentamicin, hydrocortisone, silver sulfadiazine, and triamcinolone of varying strengths. Tetracycline are dated and posted online as Excel spreadsheets, are used to help states calculate reimbursements is no longer on the $4 prescription drug list. Walgreens offers a 30-day supply for $5 (tier 1), $10 (tier 2) or Medicaid program, he explained. “By combining data frompropionate different dates, calculating ratios, $15 (tierfor 3); the a 90-day supply is double the price, respectively. Clobetasol 0.05 percent gel and and sorting the data, I was able to demonstrate the actual increases that were taking place,” said Dr. fluconazole are tier 2 drugs, whereas doxycycline, betamethasone, and ciclopirox are tier 3 medications. TriReisfeld, who brought the issue to the attention of the NYSSDDS board of directors in September 2013. amcinolone falls into tiers 1, 2, and 3, depending on the strength. CVS charges $11.99 for a 90-day supply of Three months later the was postedacetonide. to the LIDSClobetasol, website with a link fromminocycline, the NYSSDDS website. fluconazole, hydrocortisone, anddata triamcinolone doxycycline, and tretinoin The data include cost information for topical dermatologics sorted by name, package cost, and price are among the dermatologics offered at discounted rates at Costco’s pharmacy. increase. Also available for download is a spreadsheet containing current pricing for all medications sorted This information will allow physicians “to accommodate financial of paWebsites, such alphabetically. as www.GoodRX.com and www.PharmacyChecker.com, can be used tothe check pricesneeds on pretients with limited insurance coverage, and to maximize value for the healthcare system,” the website scriptions at nearby pharmacies. GoodRx shows the prices, coupons, and discounts, and even offers a free Dr.savings Reisfeld alsoPharmacyChecker used the data as the basis of anand editorial published in Cutis in January 2014. app and reads. discount card. verifies U.S. international online pharmacies. 32 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw Upcoming CME Activities Closure Course and Dermatologic Surgery: Focus on Skin Cancer Hyatt Regency Grand Cypress – Orlando, Florida May 20-21, 2015 – Closure Course This intense learning experience provides didactic instruction and practical experience in multiple closure techniques, and includes numerous anatomic site-specific discussions. A hands-on laboratory session allows for closely-monitored practice of new and complex reconstruction techniques on realistic visco-elastic models. Information presented in the course strongly complements the activities featured in Dermatologic Surgery: Focus on Skin Cancer (below), without direct overlap or duplication of material. May 22-24, 2015 – Dermatologic Surgery: Focus on Skin Cancer Top experts in cutaneous oncology and dermatopathology will present a multi-faceted program for dermatologists and dermatologic surgeons. Presenters in interactive panel discussions will share their unique perspectives on special tumor management, melanoma diagnosis and treatment, and reconstruction challenges. Advanced Mohs techs will receive updates on quality assurance measures, troubleshooting, safety, and regulatory compliance in the Mohs lab. Meeting provides an excellent follow-up to our Fundamentals of Mohs surgery technician training. Basal and Squamous Cell Cancer Pathology for Mohs Surgeons and Fundamentals of Mohs Surgery DoubleTree Hotel San Diego, Mission Valley – San Diego, California November 3-4, 2015 – Basal and Squamous Cell Cancer Pathology for Mohs Surgeons Taught by Board-certified dermatopathologists, this intense one-day course will provide a “pure pathology” experience for physicians interested in understanding the subtler characteristics of basal and squamous cell carcinoma, the tumors most commonly treated with Mohs surgery. Participants will learn to accurately interpret BCC and SCC in all its variations, as well as to differentiate tumor characteristics from background findings, reactive changes present in recently biopsied tissue, etc. The Fundamentals of Mohs Surgery course, either the full meeting or only the slide review portion – where you will be reading a large number of Mohs cases set up as “unknowns” – is perfect for applying the knowledge gained from this pathology course. November 5-8, 2015 – Fundamentals of Mohs Surgery Dermatologists and other specialists will be introduced to the basic surgical and histopathologic aspects of Mohs surgery, preparing a solid foundation for long-term proficiency in the procedure. Microscope laboratory case review and pathologist-led small group discussions will promote greater understanding and enhanced accuracy in this most critical facet of Mohs surgery. Intensive cryostat lab instruction will benefit Mohs technicians at all levels of training and experience, deepening their understanding of Mohs tissue processing and the importance of the physician-technician “team” in successful Mohs surgery. For additional information regarding ASMS educational activities, membership opportunities, and patient resources, please contact: Novella Rodgers, Executive Director American Society for Mohs Surgery 5901 Warner Avenue, Box 391 Huntington Beach, CA 92649-4659 Tel: 800-616-2767 or 714-379-6262 Fax: 714-379-6272 www.mohssurgery.org [email protected] DECODING DATA divorced from context Profiling the missing pieces and implications of Medicare’s physician payment data 34 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw BY VICTORIA HOUGHTON, ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR W hen the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) released provider payment data for 2012 on April 9, 2014, many physicians hoped the release would be a one-time event. With this winter’s announcement that the release will take place annually, dermatologists may wonder what, if anything, they should do in response — and may have some questions about their colleagues to boot.>> DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 35 DECODING DATA divorced from context It’s natural to wonder, according to Brett Coldiron, MD, immediate past president of the Academy, who wrote about the Medicare payment data released by CMS in his July 2014 From the President column. “If you looked at data about any of your colleagues, you may well have had the same thought as some patients who looked up their doctors: ‘How do they make so much?’ There may be a good answer! But without knowing it, the natural tendency is toward suspicion. That’s what makes the decision to release the data in this manner so troubling. It is most important that you not summarily condemn your colleagues who may have unique practice arrangements.” Of the specialties that made up the highestpaid 2 percent of physicians who billed Medicare, dermatology ranked sixth behind ophthalmology, hematology/oncology, cardiology, radiation oncology, and internal medicine. Among this 2 percent were 1,142 dermatologists who were paid a collective $947,065,872; 246 dermatologists received more than $1 million in payments from Medicare in 2012. Now that this information is out for the public’s viewing and judgment, with another year of data coming soon, the specialty is left to comb through the data to get the full picture, and prepare for questions — and potential criticism — from patients, policymakers, and colleagues. OUT OF THE BLUE AND INTO THE PUBLIC’S HANDS The data release in April 2014 came as somewhat of a surprise to physicians and organizations alike. While there had been movement afoot to release some information, the nature in which the data would be released was unclear. Releasing these data had been a topic of debate since the 1970s, but finally came to a head in May 2013, when a federal judge lifted a 33-yearold injunction that prohibited CMS from releasing any payment information that could be used to identify individual physicians. Shortly thereafter, CMS asked groups like the American Academy of Dermatology Association (AADA) to weigh in on whether it should release physician payment information. The AADA — and many other stakeholders — strongly opposed the release, advocating for physicians’ right to privacy. Regardless, in early 2014, CMS announced that it would consider Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests for physician payment information, and would weigh privacy interests of individual physicians against the public interest when deciding whether to disclose the amounts that were paid to individual physicians under Medicare. However, given the significant administrative burden of triaging FOIA 36 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 requests, CMS instead released all of the physician payment information to the public in one fell swoop. A CASE FOR TRANSPARENCY According to CMS, the data release was simply an effort to implement an open-information policy — a concept that stemmed from a 2013 President Obama Executive Order that called on all federal agencies to be more transparent. In a May 2014 opinion paper in the New England Journal of Medicine, Niall Brennan, Patrick Conway, MD, and Marilyn Tavenner at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) called the data release a move toward a strong “healthdata ecosystem.” “We believe that greater transparency in the health care system can drive improvement in health and contribute to the delivery of higher-quality care at lower cost.” Accordingly, CMS has high hopes for these data internally — analyzing coding and frequency patterns of 6,000 different services and procedures, broken down by physician, specialty, geographic location, charges and payments. For example, CMS looked at the data among specialties for routine office visits (codes 99211-99215), and found that neurologists were more likely to utilize codes that reimburse more than others because of the length of time the routine office visits often take (up to 40 minutes). Dermatologists, on the other hand, utilized lower-valued codes, indicating a shorter office visit. Additionally, CMS looked at the variances between individual physicians by specialty to determine how often certain services are provided. According to CMS, about 26 percent of internal medicine physicians utilized a longer office visit code (99214) less than 100 times. However, 16 percent provided this service at least 700 times. The dataset also allows CMS to see which codes are most often utilized by a specialty and accounted for the most payments. For dermatology, the most utilized code was E/M code 99213. Daniel M. Siegel, MD, Academy past president and former member and current AAD advisor to the AMA/Specialty Society Relative Scale Update Committee — the panel of experts (the AMA RUC) who make recommendations to CMS on the value of services — believes that these data can help weed out the bad apples. “The public can’t really tell who’s bad but we can,” Dr. Siegel said. Indeed, a year after the payment data was released reports of Medicare fraud lawsuits among high Medicare earners are starting to surface. Florida cardiologist Asad Qamar, MD — who topped the list of cardiologists and ranked second among all U.S. physicians — has been sued by the U.S. Department of Justice for Medicare fraud. www.aad.org/dw In the 2014 payment data, Dr. Qamar was listed as collecting $18 million from Medicare. The case against Dr. Qamar, however, stemmed from reports from two whistleblowers prior to the release of the data. Regardless, while the Medicare data alone likely won’t generate a fraud claim without a whistleblower’s validation, it may prove useful in identifying and substantiating accusations of fraud. However, Dr. Siegel recognizes that the dataset has some serious limitations. Although CMS argues that it can glean important coding and utilization patterns, many are concerned that the general public does not have the ability or interest to look beyond the individual physician’s lump sum payment figure and dig into the context. “Unless one has a very sophisticated database program, one simply cannot mine through this information,” Dr. Siegel said. “Even though there are a number of databases you can go to and look up your doctor to see how many patients they’ve done a procedure on, people aren’t sure how to put that all together.” Lawrence Green, MD, a member of the AADA Health Care Finance Committee and the Mohs Micrographic Surgery Committee and chair of SkinPAC, agrees that the information does not provide transparency to each case, but rather, patients, policymakers, and physicians alike are only given a hazy sense of what it represents. “Transparency always seems to lead to ambiguity unless you know the whole story, and the majority of people don’t know the whole story,” Dr. Green said. “If you really want transparency you have to put it in context, which is much more difficult.” THE MISSING CONTEXT Shortly after the release of data, the presidents of the AADA, American College of Mohs Surgery, the American Society for Dermatologic Surgery Association, the American Society of Dermatopathology, and the American Society for Mohs Surgery issued a statement expressing support for transparency. However, the groups expressed concern that the broad release of payment data, without appropriate context, could hinder patients’ understanding about the value of appropriate, medically necessary health care services. “Part of the problem with these data is that they are naked data,” Dr. Siegel said. Take-home pay versus office expense Essentially, tethering the term “payment” to a specific physician implies that the exact amount listed in the CMS database will end up in that particular physician’s wallet to spend as they choose. However, in most cases, this does not necessarily represent the reality. “The pure raw numbers don’t tell the whole story. It tells you what they’re getting for Medicare and not how much they’re getting as a source of actual income,” Dr. Green said. RESPONDING TO THE PRESS The release of CMS Medicare payment data for 880,000 physicians ignited a fire storm of unsolicited attention from the press. Several stories may have been unbalanced because of the lack of context. “Rest assured, the media will only publicize the things that make good press and will sell newspapers,” Daniel Siegel, MD, said. If approached by the media, physicians may focus on the following missing pieces to create a full picture of the issue: Actual take-home pay: The amount listed by CMS does not represent take-home pay because it does not account for the overhead expenses a physician has to pay as a business owner. Expertise: The physicians listed under ‘dermatology’ are not broken down by different sub-specialists, which often accounts for the variances in Medicare payments. Practice patterns: The CMS dataset may not delineate between NPI and groups of physicians. It also does not explain the percentage of Medicare patients that make up each physician’s patient population. The AAD can help walk members through potential media requests. Please email your inquiries to the AAD at [email protected]. DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 37 DECODING DATA divorced from context “One of the things people don’t understand is that you don’t put that money in your pocket,” Dr. Siegel said. “The staff that checked the patient in and the staff member on the phone — they all get paid a salary and receive benefits and health insurance. You have to pay your six medical assistants, your nurses, the cleaning crew, deliveries, gas, water, electricity, supplies. All these things cost money.” Additionally, Mohs surgeons have higher overhead expenses compared to general dermatologists because of the equipment associated with running an outpatient surgery center. “It is important for the public to understand that these payments include practice expenses,” Dr. Coldiron said. “For example, someone may say, ‘Wow, that dermatologist is making out like a bandit collecting $500,000.’ The reality is, however, that practice expense costs up to 66 percent of what a dermatologist is paid, so that $500,000 is really $170,000 after expenses. People don’t realize that a dermatologist runs a hospital outpatient clinic with medicine, nurses, medical assistants, secretaries, operating lights, power tables, etc. An office’s cost is still about 1/3 of what it costs to deliver the same service in a hospital clinic.” Sub-specialties and specialized procedures The type of subspecialist you are and the procedures you bill for will certainly alter reimbursement amounts, according to Dr. Green. Yet the CMS dataset does not distinguish dermatologists by sub-specialty. He warns that looking at the payment amount listed for a general dermatologist and comparing it to that of a Mohs surgeon is not a fair comparison, “You’ll see a dramatic difference in the Mohs surgeon’s earnings,” Dr. Green said. However, “a person will look at this and think there must be something wrong.” Another potential confounding factor in the CMS data involves physicians who provide infusions. According to Dr. Green, infliximab infusions can cost the physician up to $30,000 a year per person depending on how sick the patient is. The dermatologist has to pay that money up front; however, CMS will reimburse the physician. “A person will see that the dermatologist made $30,000 from Medicare on infusion codes. But what they don’t realize is that the dermatologist paid $30,000, so they actually broke even.” Practice arrangements and patterns Dr. Green maintains that the practice’s patient population, geographic location, and setup can each effectively skew the interpretation of the amounts listed in the CMS dataset as well. “Say I’m the dermatologist who sees the sickest psoriasis patients in my area. Of course it costs more money to see these 38 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 patients because it costs more money to treat them, when compared to someone who has mild psoriasis.” Additionally, if a senior doctor in a practice has several physician assistants, nurse practitioners, and/ or junior doctors on staff, yet they all bill up to one National Provider Identifier, CMS could potentially attribute reimbursement rates for several providers to one. “The senior doctor will look like they are earning much more, and the associates will look like they’re not making anything under Medicare,” Dr. Green said. Dr. Green adds that if a physician practices in an area with a high elderly population, the physician will probably receive more from Medicare compared to someone who doesn’t see many Medicare patients. In fact, Dr. Siegel argues that the CMS dataset may draw attention away from some of the bad apples. There may be one physician who only treats Medicare patients. Although they are doing everything correctly, they may get flagged because their payment levels appear elevated because of the high number of Medicare patients. However, “There may be someone who is doing something illegal but is listed on the low-end of the Medicare data, because they have the same bad behavior spread out with CMS and several insurance companies.” Without all of the information together, it would not be obvious that something was wrong with this individual physician’s billing. PART OF A PATTERN Although the initial sting of having personal payment information exposed has numbed a bit, the intention of CMS to continue to release this information every year adds to a sense that information privacy is a thing of the past. “The continuing push toward health care transparency, including price transparency, appears inexorable,” said Catherine I. Hanson, JD, Academy consultant and health care attorney with Whatley Kallas. Physicians have already complied with several other transparency initiatives instituted by CMS. Physician Compare — a program mandated in the Affordable Care Act (ACA) — allows patients to search for a physician by location, specialty, and other parameters. Soon, Physician Compare will also allow patients to search physicians’ scores on quality measurements. Similarly, the National Physician Payment Transparency Program — also known as Open Payments or the Sunshine Act — represents another effort within the ACA to improve transparency. In September 2014, CMS published information about the financial relationships between drug and device manufacturers and health care providers. While physicians were given the opportunity to review www.aad.org/dw their personal data and dispute information before it went live, several are concerned that the reported information has the potential to be misinterpreted. “For the doctor who is consulting for drug companies, the Sunshine Act makes sense,” Dr. Siegel said. “However, there are doctors that don’t take anything from companies and have no relationships. Yet, when a drug company drops off a reprint of a medical article — valued at $50 — suddenly those doctors have to justify that relationship.” As CMS continues to hone in on transparency, physicians are left wondering what other dominoes will fall. “Everyone’s moving toward transparency. It seems to be the fashion these days,” Dr. Green said. “The question is: will other insurers do the same?” Hanson believes so. “It is common for private payers to follow Medicare’s lead.” Case in point: Shortly after the Medicare dataset was released, United Healthcare, Aetna, and Humana announced plans to release claims payment data to the public for free. The database was created by the Health Care Cost Institute (HCCI) and was launched as a website in early 2015. Unlike CMS’s data, however, the data are not provider-specific, and include costs of treating specific conditions by ZIP code. David Newman, PhD, JD, executive director of HCCI, echoed the sentiment that transparency in health care is here to stay when he spoke to Academy members at the annual AADA Legislative Conference in September. “Big data is getting bigger and bigger and it’s getting redefined almost every day.” HCCI is a nonprofit, bi-partisan group that holds HIPAA-compliant data on about 100 million people, dating back to 2007 from both employer and individual markets, Medicare, and other entities. The sole purpose of HCCI, he said, is to make this data available to the public through analytical models that may help improve the U.S. health care system. “We are trying to link datasets together so we can ultimately get to the light at the end of the tunnel, which is essentially the ability to do research on costeffective care.” who find themselves at or near the top of these lists would be best advised to develop an explanation that puts this information in perspective,” Hanson said. “Physicians can also use this opportunity to stress the positives associated with their practices. For example, a high payment amount generally reflects extensive experience with a particular procedure.” Dr. Siegel recommends that physicians look at their own year-to-year practice patterns as well. “You can then measure trends. CMS is going to look at who has cut back, and they’re going to wonder if somebody cut back because they knew they were doing something wrong and decided to correct it.” Dr. Siegel recommends pinpointing the factors that may explain these trends. For example, did the physician serve as an association officer causing them to spend less time with patients? Did they have a sick partner and had to fill in? Jeanne De Sa, principal at Healthsperian, a health care consulting firm, spoke at the AADA Legislative Conference and called on the specialty to consider developing additional information that can supplement data released by CMS and other stakeholders. “Quality measurement is a science in its infancy. Yet the need for it has outpaced the development of it as a science,” De Sa said. “Ultimately, it’s about how you can use your own data to advance best practices,” De Sa said. “Where are the opportunities to show that what you do can improve health care broadly?” The fact remains, however: although the public release of Medicare physician payments was an attempt to increase health care transparency and detect fraud and inefficiencies, many physicians found themselves unfairly on trial because of a lack of context in the data. As a result, it is clear that more needs to be done to achieve true transparency. “We have to get more information to supplement these data,” Dr. Green said. “If we can get that, we can add a few more pieces to the puzzle to paint the whole picture: that we are doing a service and we are doing the best we can to make people feel better.” dw USING THE DATA TO BENCHMARK In addition to negative attention from the press and peers, according to Hanson, “The biggest concern is that physicians will be unfairly targeted for audits or other adverse actions by either the Medicare program or private payers because the reported payment is misleadingly large.” Consequently, there are some things physicians should be doing to benchmark their practices. Hanson recommends that physicians take a thorough look at their data and practice patterns, and compare that to those of their peers. “Physicians DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 39 A faster PIPELINE Legislation creates timelines for FDA review of sunscreens 40 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw BY JAN BOWERS, CONTRIBUTING WRITER T he long wait for new sunscreen ingredients may finally be coming to an end. Legislation signed by President Obama last November was designed to revamp and accelerate the process by which the U.S Food and Drug Administration reviews the safety and effectiveness of active ingredients in nonprescription sunscreens. Among other requirements, the Sunscreen Innovation Act (SIA) creates timelines for FDA review of the ingredients — a welcome provision for dermatologists who have been waiting years for eight UV filters widely used in other countries to potentially become available in U.S. products. “This is a huge benefit for patients because it gives some definite, reasonable timelines for the approval process for sunscreens,” says Adam I. Rubin, MD, assistant professor of dermatology at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine and chair of the AAD’s Regulatory Policy Committee. “In the past, there were no specific timelines, so some sunscreen products and components which had been used for years outside the US without a problem, were unavailable to U.S. patients. Inside the act there are different timelines for various components of the process, but the overall message is that there’s a reasonable time in which one can expect to have an answer, or a progression of the process that is reliable and timely.” >> DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 41 A faster PIPELINE EXPEDITED REVIEW The SIA “essentially obligates the FDA to consider new applications fairly rapidly, within 16 to 20 months,” says Henry W. Lim, MD, chairman and C.S. Livingood Chair of the department of dermatology at Henry Ford Hospital. “Pending applications would have to be reviewed and acted on within one year. If the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research fails to act, the application is transmitted to the FDA commissioner, who has 60 days to personally make a decision.” Dr. Lim and Steven Wang, MD, director of dermatologic surgery and dermatology at Memorial Sloan Cancer Center, are charter members of the Public Access to SunScreen (PASS) Coalition, a group comprised of health organizations, dermatologists, and sunscreen ingredient manufacturers who collaborated to work for passage of the SIA. The legislation was “a huge accomplishment by the coalition,” says Dr. Wang. “We all came together and tried to help legislators in Congress to understand the issue.” The AAD, though not a member of the coalition, worked closely with the group in advocating for the legislation. Dr. Rubin notes that both the Regulatory Policy Committee and the Congressional Policy Committee contributed to letters submitted to the Senate’s Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee to comment on discussion drafts of the bill. FILTERS PENDING UNDER TEA The initial impact of the SIA has been to jumpstart the FDA’s evaluation of the eight filters currently in the pipeline. These include the UVA filter ecamsule; UVB filters octyl triazone, amiloxate, diethylhexyl butamido trizone, and enzacamene; and UVA/UVB filters drometrizole trisiloxane, bemotrizinol (Tinosorb S), and bisoctrizole (Tinosorb M). Between 2002 and 2009, these LET’S TALK ABOUT (TALKING ABOUT) SUNSCREEN Most dermatologists are committed to routine sunscreen use as a critical component of a broader photoprotection strategy. But do they take the time to counsel their patients to apply sunscreen daily? Two recent studies, albeit with different results, indicate that more practitioners need to reinforce the sunscreen messages aggressively promoted by the AAD and other medical societies. The authors of an article published in JAMA Dermatology (2014;150(1):51-55) analyzed data from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey for patient visits from 1989 through 2010, for which sunscreen was recorded (meaning that the physician noted that sunscreen was currently being used by the patient, was dispensed in the office, or was prescribed or recommended at that particular visit). The NAMCS collects descriptive data regarding ambulatory visits to non-federal, office-based physicians in the United States. Analysis of the results by physician specialty revealed that “dermatology visits accounted for most of the appointments associated with sunscreen recommendation (86.4 percent), followed by visits with general and family practitioners (9.6 percent).” However, “the mention of sunscreen was recorded at only 1.6 percent of all dermatology visits,” and “sunscreen was mentioned by dermatologists at 11.2 percent of visits associated with a diagnosis of active or remote history of skin cancer.” The authors note that some physicians may have provided a sunscreen recommendation but failed to document it on the survey report, and some may have discussed sunscreen at an earlier visit than the one sampled. Another survey, published as a research letter in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology (72(3): 557-558) queried only dermatologists, and examined the number of patients receiving sunscreen counseling. Co-authors Richard R. Winkelmann, DO, and Darrell S. Rigel, MD, cite the earlier JAMA Dermatology study and state that their study “aimed to clarify the frequency and nature of sunscreen recommendations by dermatologists.” The survey questions included how many patients were seen in their most recent two days of practice, how many patients received sunscreen counseling, what is the dermatologist’s preferred sunscreen vehicle, number of years in practice, and ZIP code of the practice. The 530 respondents reported discussing sunscreen with 58 percent of patients (18,090 of 31,253) who were seen over a two-day period. 42 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw filters were submitted for review under the FDA’s Time and Extent Application (TEA), which requires that a product be marketed continuously in other countries for at least five years. The FDA established the TEA “to address the issue that many of the new filters were introduced in other parts of the world, mostly Europe,” explains Dr. Lim. “The purpose was for the FDA to be able to consider data generated from outside the U.S. to be used as part of the application process. The problem is that this process has been in place for 10 years, and no approvals from TEA have occurred.” The FDA moved to break the logjam soon after the start of the new year. In a blog post on FDA Voice (Feb. 24, 2015, “Shedding some light on FDA’s review of sunscreen ingredients and the Sunscreen Innovation Act”), Theresa M. Michele, MD, director of the of the Division of Nonprescription Drug Products in the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research’s Office of New Drugs, said the FDA needs more data from the manufacturers of all eight filters in order to determine whether the ingredients meet the FDA’s standards for safety and effectiveness. Once that data is received, “the clock starts running,” says Amanda Grimm, manager of regulatory and public policy for the AAD. “They have a prescribed time within which they can convene a nonprescription drug advisory committee. That’s the group of experts that will review the data and present a recommendation to the FDA.” Dr. Michele also used the post to address some “misconceptions about the SIA,” noting that the law requires deadlines for FDA action, but does not change its standard for general recognition of safety and effectiveness. In addition, she emphasized that the law doesn’t provide the FDA with additional resources (thus, the agency has requested funds for implementation as part of the President’s FY2016 budget), and it doesn’t OTHER KEY FINDINGS: Dermatologists in practice five years or less were far more likely to have discussed sunscreen than those in practice 30 years or more (70 percent vs. 47 percent). 70% 5 years or less 10 years or less 55% 47% 59% 30 years + Dermatologists in practice 10 years or less were 12 percentage points less likely to have a vehicle preference (15 percent vs. 27 percent). 15% Dermatologists from the southern U.S. were 4 percentage points more likely to discuss sunscreen with their patients (59 percent) than those from the middle or northern regions (both 55 percent). 27% 10 years + Dermatologists in practice more than 10 years were 9 percentage points more likely to recommend lotion as a vehicle (11 percent vs. 2 percent), though cream is the most popular vehicle in all age groups. 2% 11% 10 years or less 10 years + Although his findings were more encouraging than those of the earlier study, Dr. Rigel, clinical professor of dermatology at New York University Medical Center, insists that “we need to do better. The onus is on us as dermatologists to try to help protect our patients, and part of that protection is counseling people on using sunscreen as part of their overall sun protection regimen.” DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 43 A faster PIPELINE guarantee that products with additional ingredients will be approved or on the market in a specified timeframe. (For current information on the status of FDA’s review of sunscreen ingredients, see its SIA Web page at www.fda.gov/Drugs/ GuidanceComplianceRegulatoryInformation/ ucm434782.htm.) BETTER PRODUCTS, MORE CHOICES If and when the eight pending filters are approved for use in the U.S., will that make a material difference to consumers, who already have a plethora of sunscreen products to choose from? Yes, say dermatologists. “The benefits of these filters are well established and well known,” Dr. Lim remarks. “Many are quite photostable. Avobenzone is the best long-wave filter we have in the U.S., but it degrades when exposed to sunlight. The manufacturers have added other molecules to the filter to photostabilize it in the final product, but having other filters approved in the U.S. which are long-wave UVA and also photostable would give manufacturers more options in formulating sunscreens.” In addition, “most of the filters in the pipeline are more efficient, so you don’t have to use as much to be able to absorb the UV radiation. Also, many are quite large molecules, so theoretically they should be less likely to penetrate the skin and induce an allergic reaction.” Consumers may find products that use the new filters more aesthetically appealing, especially in high SPF products, says Zoe Diana Draelos, MD, a private practitioner in High Point, North Carolina. “These products waiting for approval, I think, will provide consumers with much better photoprotection that’s more pleasant to wear on a daily basis, and I think it will enhance compliance,” she says. “A lot of the agents on TEA applications are basically pigments, like laundry additives. They work the same way as zinc oxide IN THE PIPELINE Based on the Sunscreen Innovation Act, the process and timing for the eight sunscreen Time and Extent Applications now pending is as follows: Proposed order for six ingredients: additional data requested (bemotrizinol, bisoctrizole, drometrizole trisiloxane, oxtyl triazone, amoxilate, and diethylhexyl butamido triazone) FDA acts: Following issuance of a proposed order: Sponsors have 30 days to request meeting with FDA Proposed order for two ingredients: FDA determines that both ingredients are tentatively classified as not generally recognized as safe and effective (GRASE) and misbranded due to insufficient evidence (ecamsule and enzacamene) 44 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw and titanium oxide, but with those you can’t push the concentration too high or you make the skin look white. If you have another filter that you can put into the formulation, you can lower the concentration of filters that have sticky characteristics or those that whiten the skin.” Simply giving manufacturers a broader choice of ingredients will result in better products, says Darrell S. Rigel, MD, clinical professor of dermatology at New York University Medical Center. “It’s not that we have awful sunscreens now; that’s a key point,” he says. “There will just be more options; we could combine some of these new agents with the older ones, and come up with better formulations. There’s no downside to having these available. I just want the best for my patients.” Dr. Rubin says he’s optimistic that the new legislation will result in “a substantially improved process and access for Americans to get the latest innovations in sunscreen. It’s really a victory for dermatology, because sunscreen is a key component of skin cancer prevention. Having a fundamental shift in how the components are evaluated, and having it signed into law, is a significant advance.” A “side benefit” to media coverage of the SIA is that it brought the issue of photoprotection before the public, Dr. Wang says. “We have 5 million new cases of skin cancer each year, yet we still have teenagers and young adults visiting tanning booths, and we still have people who don’t use sunscreen. By talking about the Sunscreen Innovation Act, we keep drilling away about the importance of ongoing photoprotection, and the need for education and the need for behavior changes. This gives us an opportunity to go beyond sunscreen to emphasize a comprehensive strategy of photoprotection that includes avoiding sun, seeking shade, and wearing protective clothing, hats, and sunglasses.” dw If the data is insufficient, and the sponsor provides additional data during the comment period, FDA has 210 days to make determination and issue final order if no advisory committee is convened If GRASE, filter can be marketed immediately Public has 45 days to submit comments Final order issued: If the data is insufficient, and the sponsor provides additional data during the comment period, FDA has 270 days to make determination and issue final order if an advisory committee is convened If there is sufficient data, FDA has 90 days following the close of the comment period to issue a final order If final order is not issued by Division of Nonprescription Drug Products, FDA commissioner must issue within 60 days DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 45 from the president academy perspective BY MARK LEBWOHL, MD Giving our patients the floor L ike many specialists, dermatologists are facing an array of challenges that span beyond our daily patient encounters. In my April column, I mentioned several of these obstacles — from narrowed networks to restrictions on prescription medications to onerous administrative burdens on our practices. All of these issues may appear solely affect us as providers. However, these challenges affect our patients directly. The more insurance companies and policymakers squeeze physicians, the less access our patients have to specialists and their valuable care. Our patients’ interests align with ours to a large degree and they are willing to help us because of that. As a result, we must partner with our patient advocates and give their issues the spotlight. We must make 2015 the year of the patient. In the past, we have seen many examples of how effective patient involvement can be. Years ago, the precursor to CMS — the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) — issued a proposal that would revamp Medicare payments by changing the way dermatologists code for their services by classifying skin as one organ. That would have made a comprehensive skin exam the equivalent of a blood pressure check and would have changed our reimbursements drastically. Our specialty and many other medical organizations sent hundreds of letters in opposition to this change. However, the only organization that got a response from HCFA was the National Psoriasis Foundation. They had pointed out that psoriasis of the scalp is treated differently than psoriasis of the face, nails, or elbows, and that each part of the body had to be treated differently. As a result of this strong patient opposition, the HCFA scrapped its proposal and agreed to count each part of the skin separately. Another example of the value of patient advocacy is CMS’s 2014 proposal that would institute cuts to phototherapy services by up to 60 percent as part of a plan that would equalize payments between physician offices, hospital outpatient departments, and ambulatory surgery centers. The AADA advocated strongly against this proposal, but letters from patients came pouring in as well. In the 2014 Final Rule, CMS delayed finalizing the proposal because our patients made them realize that instituting this proposal would close many phototherapy units and patient access to care would be diminished. 46 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 Additionally, recently we have been calling on Congress to repeal and replace the sustainable growth rate (SGR) formula, and so have our patients because without a sustainable Medicare physician payment system, our patients lose access to care. As a physician who treats psoriasis, I know that every patient is different and I often spend a lot of time with each. Their treatments also require a lot of monitoring. Patients on methotrexate or cyclosporine often get my cell phone number because I want them to be able to call and ask about drug interactions which could be dangerous. Many patient advocacy groups have sent letters in favor of repealing and replacing the SGR formula because they recognize that if we are paid less for our services, we will have to see more patients to pay the bills. This takes time away from all of our patients and, most disconcertingly, our sickest patients. At press time, Congress has passed the SGR legislation. For more information, visit www.aad.org. These are just a few examples of how our issues align with our patients’ and how working together can generate productive policies and impede dangerous ones. Going forward, we have a number of challenges on the horizon that will require this team approach. I call on all Academy members to not only get involved with Academy advocacy activities, but to support our patient organizations. When we go to Congress and CMS we are seen as self-serving. When patients go before these policymaking bodies, they have a much louder voice. I encourage the entire membership to join me in activating our strongest patient advocacy efforts yet. Give your patients’ issues the floor. dw www.aad.org/dw Precisely. medicine reimagined academy update AAD urges ABD to alter MOC R esponding to member concerns about how time-consuming and expensive maintenance of certification has proven, the American Academy of Dermatology recently initiated a dialogue with the American Board of Dermatology about how to make the program less cumbersome. On April 2 the AAD wrote to the ABD with specific recommendations for changes, including: • Alter the rules around self-assessment (component 2 of MOC) such that most ACCME-approved CME activities would qualify and making them reportable to the ABD through the AAD’s new Online Learning Center (www.aad. org/olc). • Create an open-book option for the examination requirement (component 3 of MOC), and alter the exam to a “learn to competence” model rather than the current pass/fail system. In its its letter to the ABD, the AAD wrote, “An exam that fails a percentage of diplomates each year is inferior to a system that helps all diplomats learn essential new information and rewards them for doing so.” • Suspend component 4 requirements for patient and peer surveys. In its letter to the ABD, the AAD wrote that the ABD should “suspend Part IV MOC until the value of these activities has been established. We believe there is a crisis of trust in the ABD and that this step is necessary to restore trust and reasonable dialogue.” The AAD letter followed consideration by the Academy Board of Directors of several resolutions from the Advisory Board related to MOC. As AAD President Mark Lebwohl, MD, noted in a President’s Message on April 2, “The Academy has heard the concerns of our members, expressed through Advisory Board Resolutions at the Annual Meeting and individual comments made directly to Academy leadership. The American Board of Dermatology (ABD), not the Academy, determines MOC requirements for its diplomates.” To read the full message and the Academy’s letter to the ABD, visit www.aad.org/education/moc/aad-president-smessage-on-moc. Board approves new policy, advocacy agenda THE AAD AND AADA BOARDS OF DIRECTORS approved administrative regulations changing the timing of required action on membership petitions at its March 23 meeting. Petitions presented at the Annual Business Meeting will be addressed at the next Board meeting following the close of the Annual Meeting. The AADA Board approved the 2015 advocacy agenda. Top-tier items on the agenda include access to pharmaceuticals/cost transparency, Medicare physician payment reform, scope of practice/truth in advertising, network adequacy and transparency, skin cancer prevention/indoor tanning, IPAB repeal, and patient access to anatomic pathology services. Finally, the Board of Directors selected Thomas Rohrer, MD, as its representative to the Nominating Committee. The Advisory Board selected Adnan Nasir, MD as its representative to the Nominating Committee; it also elected a new chair, Terence Cronin Jr, MD, and vice chair, Holly Fritch, MD. Both will take office at the conclusion of the 2016 Annual Meeting. – RICHARD NELSON 48 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw news + events news + events DATEBOOK WHAT’S COMING UP 2016 committee appointment application now open MEMBERS ARE THE HEART of every association and the American Academy of Dermatology and AAD Association are no different. The Academy is one of the most influential medical organizations in the world because its members are willing to offer their time and energy to activities to further advance the Academy’s strategic framework. Each year, hundreds of dermatologists serve the Academy through our organizational governance structure and through other service opportunities. The Appointment Selection Committee, chaired by Abel Torres, MD, JD, Academy president-elect, has begun accepting applications to fill 2016 open appointments. The 2016 online appointment application is available at www.aad.org/forms/AppointmentApplication/Default.aspx. Applications must be submitted by June 30, 2015. Members who are selected to serve will be contacted in the winter. Letters of recommendation are highly suggested, but are not required. Information about specific committees and task forces, committee member responsibilities, and other opportunities is available in the Governance Handbook, available online at www.aad.org/forms/CCTF/Default.aspx. Contact Jeanine Coffman at (847) 240-1061 or [email protected] for more information. – JEANINE COFFMAN Registration, housing for Summer Academy Meeting 2015 opens in May REGISTRATION AND HOUSING for the Summer Academy Meeting 2015, Aug. 19-23 in New York City, will be available online at www.aad.org beginning at 12 pm CT, May 20 for physician, life, and honorary members, and May 27 for all others. Housing reservations at the New York Hilton Midtown and The London Hotel must be made online in conjunction with registration for the meeting to receive the discounted housing rate. See the meeting’s registration website for hotel deadlines and cancellation and change polices. More information about the Summer Academy Meeting 2015 is available at www.aad.org/meetings/ 2015-summer-academy-meeting. – SUSAN JACKSON Make an impact WHEN YOU REGISTER for the Summer Academy Meeting 2015, you can also make a donation and join in helping change lives through two vital AAD programs: SPOT Skin Cancer™ seeks to encourage sun-safe behavior by integrating public awareness and education, providing access to screenings and shade structures, advocating for increased legislation, and supporting research. Camp Discovery gives children with chronic skin conditions a life-changing summer camp experience, where they can build self-esteem and learn they are not alone in their daily struggles. Your donation will positively impact patients, the public, and our communities! Make your donation as you complete your online registration for the meeting. DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 49 classifieds PROFESSIONAL PROFESSIONAL OPPORTUNITIES OPPORTUNITIES LAJOLLA, CALIFORNIA Seeking a BC/BE dermatologist to join Contact Carrie Parratt at (847) 240-1770 a busy, well-established, growing practice. Recently expanded office just blocks from the Pacific Ocean in Central Florida Dermatology and Skin Cancer Center (CFD) is seeking an ACMS fellowship trained Mohs Surgeon and/or a BE/BC General Dermatologist. We are also looking for qualified ARNPs who have dermatology experience. CFD is located in Winter Haven, FL. Winter Haven is the home of Legoland and is also known as the Chain of Lakes area. Winter Haven offers the suburb experience with quick access to Tampa, Orlando, and the beach. Interested parties, who want to join a busy and successful practice, can submit resumes/CVs to our Practice Manager, Dan Lackey, at [email protected] or call 863.293.2147 for more information. Please visit us on the web at www.centralfldermatology.com. If contributing to a team with an expectation for excellence and creating a balanced and fulfilling life are important to you, St. Vincent Healthcare in Billings, Montana has the opportunity and community for you! St. Vincent Healthcare in Billings, Montana seeks U.S. trained BE/BC certified physician for our Dermatology & Skin Cancer Center • Full time employed position • Dermatopathologist in house • St. Vincent Healthcare’s laboratory is accredited by the College of American Pathologists (CAP) and our cancer program is recognized by the Commission on Cancer (CoC) as an Approved Cancer Program • Full complement of medical specialties available. • Thriving medical community in a family-oriented suburban location • Excellent School System • Abundant recreational activities year round – hiking, skiing, fishing, biking and camping • Competitive salaries with productivity incentives • Start date bonus, Moving Allowances and CME reimbursement For more information, please contact Therese Teske, Physician Recruiter at (406) 237-4017 [email protected] or visit our website at www.svh-mt.org the world’s best climate. Competitive salary, incentives, benefits and part- OCALA, FLORIDA Partnership available. Established practice. Contact Karey, (866) 4884100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. nership opportunities. Please send CV to [email protected]. PORTERVILLE, CALIFORNIA Partnership available. Established practice. Contact Karey, (866) 4884100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. TAMPA, FLORIDA Partnership available. Established practice. Contact Karey, (866) 4884100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. BOULDER, COLORADO Partnership available. Established practice. Contact Karey, (866) 4884100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA Partnership available. Established practice. Contact Karey, (866) 4884100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. MONTROSE, COLORADO Partnership available. Established practice. Contact Karey, (866) 4884100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. CALUMET CITY, IL/DYER, IN Partnership available. Established practice. Contact Karey, (866) 4884100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. GROTON, CONNECTICUT Partnership available. Established practice. Contact Karey, (866) 4884100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. HICKORY, NORTH CAROLINA Partnership available. Established practice. Contact Karey, (866) 4884100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. SOUTHBURY, CONNECTICUT Partnership available. Established practice. Contact Karey, (866) 4884100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. SANFORD, NORTH CAROLINA Partnership available. Established practice. Contact Karey, (866) 4884100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. WATERBURY, CONNECTICUT Partnership available. Established practice. Contact Karey, (866) 4884100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO Partnership available. Established practice. Contact Karey, (866) 4884100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. ************ Billings, Montana listed 4th in cities with highest satisfaction – Business Insider, Gallup 2014 Manchester & Wolfeboro, NH APDerm® is a vibrant, growing practice of clinically accomplished and patient-focused dermatologists who practice in a community distinguished as among the best places to live on the east coast/ Boston area. We are seeking a full or part-time dermatologist/Mohs surgeon to join our group of twelve board certified dermatologists in a professionally run practice with dermatopathology lab, Mohs surgery and medical aesthetics. This opportunity would allow a highly qualified dermatologist/ Mohs surgeon to practice with excellent support staff in a collegial practice in our Manchester and Wolfeboro, New Hampshire offices with competitive salary, benefits and opportunity for practice ownership. For more information, please contact: Glenn Smith, MHA, Administrator and Chief Operating Officer, at (978) 849-7501 or email [email protected]. 50 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw ad index PROFESSIONAL PROFESSIONAL OPPORTUNITIES OPPORTUNITIES We gratefully acknowledge the following advertisers in this issue: WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS Partnership available. Established practice. Contact Karey, (866) 4884100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. FREDERICKSBURG, VIRGINIA Partnership available. Established practice. Contact Karey, (866) 4884100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. BOUNTIFUL, UTAH Associate Opportunity. Contact Karey, (866) 488-4100 or www. MyDermGroup.com. WASHINGTON, DC Partnership available. Established practice. Contact Karey, (866) 4884100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. Company Product/Service American Society for Mohs Surgery...CME........................................................ 33 Bayer Healthcare.................................Finacea..................................................... 9 Care Credit...........................................Patient Financing...........................cover, 3 Hawknad Mfg Industries.....................Clear n Smooth...................................... 15 Midmark...............................................Corporate............................................... 21 Modernizing Medicine.........................EMR...................................................IFC-1 NexTech...............................................EHR....................................................... BC Officite..................................................AADDermsonline................................. IBC Valeant Pharmaceuticals....................Onexton................................................ 5-6 VisualDX...............................................Corporate............................................... 47 Recruitment Advertising Adult & Pediatric Dermatology, PC.................................................................... 50 Central Florida Dermatology & Skin Cancer Center......................................... 50 St. Vincent Healthcare........................................................................................ 50 PRACTICES FOR SALE MOHS SURGEON Multiple Part Time Opportunities Montrose, CO 1-2 days/mo Enfield, CT 2-3 days/mo Groton, CT 1-2 days/mo Tampa, FL 1-2 days/mo Reno, NV 1-2 days/mo Hickory, NC 1-2 days/mo Sanford, NC 2-3 days/mo Bountiful, UT 3-4 days/mo Contact Karey, (866) 488-4100 or www.MyDermGroup.com. We Buy Practices •Why face the changes in Health Care alone? •Sell all or part of your practice •Succession planning •Lock in your value now •Monetization of your practice •Retiring Please call Jeff Queen at (866) 488-4100 or e-mail [email protected] Visit www.MyDermGroup.com weekly Dermatology World Weekly. One email every Wednesday. Just a few stories. The ones that really matter. Because you're busy. But you still want to know what's going on. Classified ads are welcomed from dermatologist members of the American Academy of Dermatology, from dermatology residents of approved training programs and institutions with which they are affiliated, as well as from recruitment agencies or organizations that acquire and sell dermatology practices and equipment. Although the AAD assumes the statements being made in classified advertisements are accurate, the Academy does not investigate the statements and assumes no liability concerning them. Acceptance of classified advertising is restricted to professional opportunities available, professional opportunities wanted, practices for sale, office space available, and equipment available. The Academy reserves the right to decline, withdraw, or edit advertisements at its discretion. The publisher is not liable for omissions, spelling, clerical or printer’s errors. For more information about classified advertising, contact Carrie Parratt at [email protected]. FOR DISPLAY ADVERTISING INFORMATION, CONTACT: Ascend Integrated Media, Publisher’s Representatives Bridget Blaney (Companies A-D and Q-R) Email: [email protected] Phone: (773) 259-2825 Cathleen Gorby (Companies E-L and S-T) Email: [email protected] Phone: (913) 780-6923 Maureen Mauer (Companies M-P and Tu-Z) Email: [email protected] Phone: (913) 780-6633 ADVERTISING STATEMENT: The American Academy of Dermatology and AAD Association does not guarantee, warrant, or endorse any product or service advertised in this publication, nor does it guarantee any claim made by the manufacturer of such product or service. THE AD INDEX IS PROVIDED AS A COURTESY TO OUR ADVERTISERS. THE PUBLISHER IS NOT LIABLE FOR OMISSIONS OR SPELLING ERRORS. DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 51 facts at your fingertips data on display TEEN TANNING DROPPED FROM 2009 TO 2013; SUNSCREEN USE FLAT I n a sign that the efforts of dermatologists to change the culture around indoor tanning are having an impact, the National Youth Risk Behavior Survey, conducted every two years by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention*, has shown a drop in the percentage of teenagers who said they used an indoor tanning device in its last two iterations. (To learn more about dermatologists’ efforts on this front, read last August’s cover story, “Taking on tanning,” at www.aad.org/dw/monthly/2014/august/taking-on-tanning.) The 2013 survey showed that the likelihood of using an indoor tanning device rises with age — 12th graders are more than twice as likely to tan as 9th graders — and is four times more common among females than males. While more teens are heeding warnings about the dangers of tanning, sunscreen use among the age group has hardly budged for a decade. See p. 40 for discussion of how a new law may lead to more sunscreens on the market in the U.S. – RICHARD NELSON dw Teen tanning and sunscreen usage 20 15.6% 13.3% PERCENT 15 10 9.0% 10.3% 9.3% 10.8% 12.8% 10.1% 5 0 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 *The National Youth Risk Behavior Survey is conducted every other spring by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The 2013 version includes responses from 13,583 students in grades 9-12. Visit www.cdc.gov/yrbss for more information. **Percentage of high school students who said they most of the time or always wore sunscreen with an SPF of 15 or higher when they were outside for more than one hour on a sunny day. ***Percentage of high school students who said they had used an indoor tanning device, such as a sunlamp, sunbed, or tanning booth one or more times during the 12 months before the survey. 52 DERMATOLOGY WORLD // May 2015 www.aad.org/dw Officite made the process seamless and the staff was great! Everything we asked, they delivered! A great experience. -Drs. Menaker & Rodney Officite client since 2012 Endorsed Web Presence Provider of the Dermatologists everywhere will tell you the same thing – we put our customers first. That’s part of why we’re a leader in healthcare websites and online marketing, and why we’re trusted by over 30 state and national healthcare associations. We build long-term personal relationships that result in success, growth, and new patients. Call or visit us online for a Free Web Presence Tour 888-748-2768 | www.Officite.com/DermWorld Web Presence Solutions for Healthcare Practices BEYOND claims to COLLECTIONS Work your way with customized templates, instantly review patient records, e-prescribe, and chart anytime, anywhere. Seeking a system that works for you? Improve efficiency, see more patients, and increase reimbursements with intelligent technology from Nextech. This fully integrated, dermatology specific EMR and practice management system is intuitively designed, providing maximum data capture for MU & PQRS and automatically generating ICD-10 codes for maximum reimbursement. Call today or visit Nextech.com to learn how intelligent technology can improve your practice. (866) 857-7809 BEYOND HIT is HEALTHCARE INTELLIGENT TECHNOLOGY All-In-One, Anytime, Anywhere, Specialty Specific Solutions and Services