The Academy submitted a statement for the record in response to the Senate Finance Committee Hearing on the President’s Fiscal Year 2021 Budget.
The hearing on February 13, 2020, centered around the administration’s proposed health-care priorities outlined in the budget document. The budget document includes a proposal that would impose a five percent reduction to non-primary care/services in Medicare. Academy comments point out the fact that this five percent reduction would compound the already-expected eight percent reduction contemplated in 2021 for audiology and that a combined 13 percent reduction would be untenable.
Academy comments also urge the administration to reevaluate the expected 2021 Medicare reimbursement cuts to certain providers planned to offset the increase in payment for E/M services. Academy comments highlight some of the unique audiology billing/coding restrictions that will exacerbate the effect of the planned reductions and urge the administration to consider an alternate approach to offset the E/M increases.
Finally, the budget proposal lists improving access to rural health care as an overarching priority. Academy comments point out that the Medicare Audiology Access and Services Act (H.R. 4056/S. 2446) would allow beneficiaries direct access to audiology services and classify audiologists as “practitioners” that would allow them to provide services through telehealth.
Recent Posts
Audiology CPT® Codes Enter Routine AMA RUC Review Process
Over the next several months, a significant number of CPT® codes used to report audiology function tests will undergo review through the AMA/Specialty Society Relative…
Academy Advocacy on Capitol Hill for Student Loan Reform and EHDI Support
Last week, Joanne Zurcher, MPP, and Academy member Melissa Heche, AuD, traveled to Capitol Hill to advocate for two important Academy priorities: protecting access to…
A New Era in Hearing Care: FDA Approves OTOF Gene Therapy
In the United States, mutations in the OTOF-gene (otoferlin gene) account for between one percent and eight percent of non-syndromic congenital hearing loss (Ford et…


