UNC School of Medicine’s John Batsis, MD, and UConn’s Patrick Coll, and colleagues authored an analysis of Medicare’s Annual Wellness Visits since they were instituted 10 years ago, finding the one-size-fits-all approach needs an upgrade to truly help seniors prevent disease and live more healthy lives.
While medical visits that address disease prevention and the promotion of health and wellness are important parts of medical care for older adults, when Medicare was introduced in 1965, it did not address this important component of health care. Medicare took an important step to correct this deficit when it initiated Medicare annual wellness visits (AWV) ten years ago.
AWV’s emphasis on disease prevention and health promotion for older adults was a huge step forward, however the current “one size fits all” approach does not adequately meet the wellness needs of a diverse population of older adults.
In their recent special article in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, Patrick P Coll, MD, medical director for senior health and associate director for clinical geriatrics at the UConn Center on Aging at UConn Health, and John A. Batsis, MD, associate professor in the division of geriatric medicine at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and colleagues reviewed the need to redesign AWV’s in order to optimally identify issues that are important to each individual patient.
“As a geriatrics care provider I have learned a lot about why some of my patients are healthier and more independent than others. I know that the wellness goals of my patients are very different depending on their age, health, family support, current function and socioeconomic status,” Coll said. “Medicare’s no cost annual wellness visit is an opportunity for me to work with my patients and come up with a wellness plan that is right for them. Unfortunately because of its one size fits all approach, the current Medicare AWV does not help me address the wellness needs of all my patients.”
More than 60 million Americans are eligible for the Medicare AWV at no cost. These visits are an opportunity for primary care providers and their older patients to work together on a wellness plan that promotes good health and functional independence.
Batsis, a member of the UNC Carolina Population Center, said, “We strive to work collaboratively with patients to achieve their goals. The current structure of the AWV is likely most helpful in community-dwelling older adults who are at lower risk of functional decline and who may have longer periods of disability-free illnesses. Yet we know that health promotion and prevention measures can be offered across various stages of the aging process, and importantly they differ based on age, function, and socioeconomic status. We believe this is a missed opportunity to use the Medicare AWV in a manner to optimize quality of life and physical function among the millions of older adults in the United States.”
“Unfortunately, the current AWV does not recognize that the wellness goals of a fit and healthy 65-year old may be very different than the wellness goals of a 95-year old with complex medical problems and associated disability,” the authors said.
Many older Americans have never heard of and never receive a no-cost Medicare AWV. In fact, this is often confused as annual physical whose goals often differ. Many primary care providers struggle to fit these types of visits into a busy work schedule and may not feel that the current AWV helps them promote wellness goals for all their older patients.
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