CMS stated to me in their correspondence:
A claim for blood glucose test strips was filed with NHIC, Corp. (NHIC) and an initial determination was performed on January 7, 2011. The clEiim was found unfavorable because similar items were already provided...The reconsideration case file included a Reconsideration Request Form, re-determination Request Form, Medicare remittance, physician's order, delivery ticket, and clinical
documentation...
documentation...
Our Medical Review Panel, consisting of a nurse and a physician, has reviewed the submitted
documentation and decided that payment cannot be allowed for blood glucose test strips....
documentation and decided that payment cannot be allowed for blood glucose test strips....
When I turned 65 the Government took over control of my glucose monitoring. I could not buy the tabs anymore, the Government, some physician and nurse, yes some unknown nurse, said my 10 years of daily data were not proof that prevention works. I even sent them my book on Obesity and Type 2 Diabetes! For CMS, it appears, I must gain 50 or more pounds and have HbA1c in excess of 7.0 before they would allow me to buy it myself. Well thank God for Amazon, they sell them and I buy them, and I stay well! And thank you Government, for the ACA, you really created a monster. Happy Second Birthday.
But to the most strange part is the recent NIH News, stating that intervention and prevention works, namely I am doing the right thing.
They NIH state:
Prevention programs that apply interventions tested in the landmark
Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) clinical trial would also improve
quality of life for people who would otherwise develop type 2 diabetes.
The analysis of costs and outcomes in the DPP and its follow-up study
is published in the April 2012 issue of Diabetes Care and online March
22 at http://diabetes.org/diabetescare.
The DPP showed that lifestyle changes (reduced fat and calories in
the diet and increased physical activity) leading to modest weight loss
reduced the rate of type 2 diabetes in high-risk adults by 58 percent,
compared with placebo. Metformin reduced diabetes by 31 percent. These
initial results were published in 2002. As researchers monitored
participants for seven more years in the DPP Outcomes Study (DPPOS),
they continued to see lower rates of diabetes in the lifestyle and
metformin groups compared with placebo (www.nih.gov/news/health/oct2009/niddk-29.htm). Lifestyle changes were especially beneficial for people age 60 and older.
The economic analysis of the DPP/DPPOS found that metformin treatment
led to a small savings in health care costs over 10 years, compared
with placebo. (At present, metformin, an oral drug used to treat type 2
diabetes, is not approved by the Food and Drug Administration for
diabetes prevention.) The lifestyle intervention as applied in the
study was cost-effective, or justified by the benefits of diabetes
prevention and improved health over 10 years, compared with placebo.
So NIH wants prevention but CMS, that is Medicare prohibits prevention, or at least that nurse in Tennessee says so. Remember my fear of some bloated GS 9 denying coverage! Well she is in Tennessee. And she is a contractor!
The stupidity of CMS, the intent should be prevention, not waiting until the disease takes over. I even wanted to pay out of my own pocket, denied. Back to Amazon! Thank you Dr. Bezos! Perhaps Amazon could open a full service Medical practice as well. The of course DC would send in the thugs and shut it down, perhaps even send in EPA!
Thus with the new ACA, on one hand they deny prevention and on the other hand they praise the need for prevention. In case anyone has noted this happens all the time with big Government. And we are only 2 years into this mess!