Pain physician
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Percutaneous disc decompression utilizing Nucleoplasty has emerged as one of the minimally invasive techniques for treatment of low back pain and lower extremity pain due to contained herniated discs. Only 1 study to date has examined its effect on functional activity and pain medication use; however, results were not analyzed over time, and recall bias was a limitation. ⋯ Nucleoplasty appears to be safe and effective. Randomized, controlled studies are required to further evaluate its long-term efficacy.
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Emerging strategies in health care are extremely important for interventional pain physicians, as well as with the payors in various categories. While most Americans, including the US Congress and Administration, are looking for ways to provide affordable health care, the process of transformation and emerging health care strategies are troubling for physicians in general, and interventional pain physicians in particular. With the new Congress, only new issues rather than absolute solutions seem to emerge. ⋯ The Congressional Budget Office has projected budget implications of change in the SGR mechanism, with consideration for allowing payment rates to increase by the amount of medical inflation, costing Medicare an estimated $218 billion from 2007 to 2016. Changes in the physician fee schedule in 2006 using the bottom-up methodology have resulted in significant cuts for interventional pain physicians performing procedures in an office setting. Medicaid physician payments and ambulatory surgery center payments for interventional techniques are proposed to be reduced substantially by Medicare and Medicaid, while hospital payments remain at stable levels with increases.