Logo
ISO 9001:2000
Menu Arrow
Menu Top
Menu Arrow
Menu Top
Menu Arrow
ISO Certified

Medicare Information Resource

Note: Should you have landed here as a result of a search engine (or other) link, be advised that these files contain material which is copyrighted by the American Medical Association (AMA). You are forbidden to download the files unless you read, agree to and abide by the provisions of the copyright statement. Read the copyright statement now (you will be linked back to here).

Medicare Information Resource Part B
MIR-2007 04B, April 2007

Colorectal Cancer Screening Data (PE200703-20)

Interested in seeing how well your county or state has done in providing colorectal cancer screening to people with Medicare? 
 
Click on the following link: http://www.mrnc.org/crcreport2/ External link.

The Carolinas Centers for Medical Excellence, Inc., the Quality Improvement Organization for North and South Carolina, calculated national, state, and county colorectal cancer screening rates using Medicare claims data from 1998-2004. The data indicate that over half (52 percent) of those eligible for screening had at least one test in the seven-year period.

Other highlights from the data:

  • Although the largest group of people eligible for screening was composed of persons between the ages 65-74 (41 percent of those eligible), the rate of screening was highest among people ages 75-84 (59 percent screened);
  • Test use was highest among Caucasians (53 percent), followed by Asians (46 percent), African Americans (45 percent), persons of Hispanic descent (45 percent), and Native Americans (35 percent);
  • There was considerable disparity between the test rates for those eligible for only Medicare (54 percent) and persons eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid (43 percent);
  • Persons eligible for Medicare due to a disability also had lower test rates (45 percent) than those eligible because of age (54 percent);
  • Among the four covered tests, fecal occult blood test was the most commonly used test with a rate of 34 percent. Colonoscopy had the second highest use rate (31 percent), followed by sigmoidoscopy (14 percent) and barium enema (6 percent);
  • Test use varied across states. In 2004, Rhode Island Medicare consumers had the highest test use (26 percent had one of the tests) and the lowest in Wyoming (13 percent).

CMS Needs Your Help
No part of the Medicare population has high rates of use of colorectal cancer screening tests. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) needs your help to get the word out to your Medicare patients and their caregivers about the benefits of colorectal cancer screening. We hope that you will encourage your eligible Medicare patients to take advantage of this potentially life saving benefit.

For More Information
For information and resources to help you discuss colorectal cancer screening with your patients, visit the following American Cancer Society Web site:

http://www.cancer.org/colonmd?utm_source=CMSlistserve&utm_medium=email&utm_term=colon&utm_content=colonMD. External link

Medicare-Covered Colorectal Cancer Screening Tests/Procedures:
For specific details on Medicare coverage criteria and billing procedures for colorectal cancer screening services, refer to Special Edition MLN Matters article: SE0710 http://www.cms.hhs.gov/MLNMattersArticles/downloads/SE0710.pdf External pdf.

Thank you for supporting CMS’s effort to increase awareness of colorectal cancer and the colorectal cancer screening benefit covered by Medicare.

Colorectal cancer is preventable, treatable, and beatable. Encourage your patients to get screened—it could save their lives.

CMS Learn Resource 200703-20

CPT five-digit codes, descriptions, and other data only are copyright 2006 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved. No fee schedules, basic units, relative values or related listings are included in CPT. AMA does not directly or indirectly practice medicine or dispense medical services. AMA assumes no liability for data contained or not contained herein.   Applicable FARS/DFARS clauses apply.

 

   
 
Spacer Image
 Translate this page >> 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Copyright