Annual
HIV Testing Will Now Be Covered Under Medicare
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| SUMMARY:
Medicare beneficiaries are now eligible
for HIV testing thanks to a recent policy
change announced last week. Previously the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
(CMS) did not cover routine screenings under
Medicare. The new policy includes coverage
for an annual test for those who fall into
various high-risk groups and pregnant women,
as well as those who request testing identified
risk factors. |
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By
Liz Highleyman
"Today's
decision marks an important milestone in the history
of the Medicare program," said Secretary of Health
and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius. "Beginning
with expanding coverage for HIV screening, we can
now work proactively as a program to help keep Medicare
beneficiaries healthy and take a more active role
in evaluating the evidence for preventive services."
Below
is the "Decision Summary" from a CMS Decision
Memo issued on December 8.
Full
memo, including background information, rationale,
and supporting literature are available
online.
Coverage
Decision Memorandum for Screening for the Human Immunodeficiency
Virus (HIV) Infection
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
has determined that the evidence is adequate to conclude
that screening for HIV infection, which is recommended
with a grade of A by the U.S. Preventive Services
Task Force (USPSTF) for certain individuals, is reasonable
and necessary for early detection of HIV and is appropriate
for individuals entitled to benefits under Part A
or enrolled under Part B.
Therefore CMS will cover both standard and U.S. Food
and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved HIV rapid screening
tests for:
1. Annual voluntary HIV screening of Medicare
beneficiaries at increased risk for HIV infection
per USPSTF guidelines:
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Men
who have had sex with men after 1975; |
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Men
and women having unprotected sex with multiple
[more than one] partners; |
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Past
or present injection drug users; |
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Men
and women who exchange sex for money or drugs,
or have sex partners who do; |
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Individuals
whose past or present sex partners were HIV-infected,
bisexual, or injection drug users; |
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Persons
being treated for sexually transmitted diseases; |
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Persons
with a history of blood transfusion between 1978
and 1985; |
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Persons
who request an HIV test despite reporting no individual
risk factors, since this group is likely to include
individuals not willing to disclose high-risk
behaviors; and |
2.
Voluntary HIV screening of pregnant Medicare beneficiaries
when the diagnosis of pregnancy is known, during the
third trimester, and at labor.
We
are deleting the following reference to non-coverage
of HIV screening from the coverage manual, Section
190.14: "However, in the absence of a documented
AIDS defining or HIV-associated disease, an HIV-associated
sign or symptom, or documented exposure to a known
HIV-infected source, the testing is considered by
Medicare to be screening and thus is not covered by
Medicare (for example, history of multiple blood component
transfusions, exposure to blood or body fluids not
resulting in consideration of therapy, history of
transplant, history of illicit drug use, multiple
sexual partners, same-sex encounters, prostitution,
or contact with prostitutes)."
12/15/09
Sources
Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Coverage Decision
Memorandum for Screening for the Human Immunodeficiency
Virus (HIV) Infection (CAG-00409N).
December 8, 2009.
Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention. HIV screening
to be included in Medicare expansion. CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB
Prevention News Update.
December 10, 2009.