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CAP Home > CAP Media Center > CAP News Release Index > Legislation to Permanently Grant TC Grandfather Expected in US Senate
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Published on June 29, 2006

Legislation to Permanently Grant TC Grandfather Expected in US Senate

Washington, D.C.—The College of American Pathologists (CAP) is expecting Senators Blanche Lincoln (D-AR) and Senator Craig Thomas (R-WY) to introduce legislation that would make the “TC Grandfather” permanent. Senators Jim Bunning (R-KY) and Kent Conrad (D-ND) will also sign on to the bill. The Physician Pathology Services Continuity Act of 2006 would allow independent laboratories to continue to receive payment from Medicare for the technical component (TC) of pathology services provided to hospital inpatients and outpatients.

“We applaud the Senators for championing this legislation that would provide the stability independent laboratories and hospitals need to maintain services vital to Medicare beneficiaries,” said Thomas M. Sodeman, MD, FCAP, and president of CAP. “Without this legislation, independent laboratories will have to seek payment from already cash-strapped hospitals that would receive no new funds from Medicare to pay for these medical services. The burden will fall especially hard on small and rural hospitals, which typically cannot afford in-house pathology services and rely heavily on independent labs.”

The legislation would permanently grant the TC “grandfather,” which is scheduled to expire at the end of 2006. In 1999, CMS issued a final notice that Medicare would no longer pay independent laboratories for the technical component (TC) of pathology services provided to hospital inpatients and outpatients. The “grandfather” exemption applies to services delivered to any hospital that used an independent laboratory for TC services as of July 22, 1999, which is the date the CMS proposed eliminating this payment arrangement.

To date, this payment change has not been fully implemented because the College has successfully won passage in Congress of a series of temporary TC “grandfather” exemptions. Most recently, in 2003, under the Medicare Modernization Act, Congress provided a “grandfather” through 2006. However, without further congressional action, this protection will expire at year’s end, and independent laboratories will be forced to seek payment from the hospitals.

Because the “grandfather” applies to the hospital, any laboratory contracting with a “grandfathered” hospital would be able to bill and receive payment directly from Medicare for both the professional component (PC) and TC, regardless of whether they had a previous arrangement with the hospital.

The legislation is also supported by the American Hospital Association and the National Rural Health Association.

The College of American Pathologists (CAP) is a medical society serving about 16,000 physician members and the laboratory community throughout the world.  It is the world’s largest association composed exclusively of pathologists and is widely considered the leader in laboratory quality assurance. The CAP is an advocate for high quality and cost-effective patient care.

 
 

 

 

   
 
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