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Friday, Dec 23 2016

Full Issue

As Cardiac Rehab Efforts Succeed, Medicare Offers Hospitals Incentives To Expand Programs

Such programs offer supervised exercise and counseling to help decrease the risk of future heart attacks, but some patients can't afford the co-pays and others live too far from such centers.

Modern Healthcare: Medicare Offers Hospitals Cash To Rev Up Cardiac Rehab Participation 

After patients have a heart attack or heart surgery, interventional cardiologist Dr. Amit Keswani urges them to go into cardiac rehabilitation. The program of supervised exercise and counseling helps cardiac patients recover and lowers their risk of future heart attacks, chest pain, hospital admission and a slew of other medical problems. But at most, only about half actually do it. “I wish that it would be more,” Keswani said. “I tell my patients: It's better than any medicine.” Some patients can't afford the co-pays. Others live too far from the cardiac rehab facility that's part of Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, where Keswani works. (Whitman, 12/22)

Related KHN story: Cardiac Rehab Improves Health, But Cost And Access Issues Complicate Success (Appleby, 8/3)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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