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Endorsing a lifestyle

Medicare will reimburse heart patients for two wellness programs that

focus on wholesale changes. Supporters see the move as a shift toward

proactive care.

By E. MacGregor, Times Staff Writer

June 12, 2006

http://www.latimes.com/features/health/la-he-

ornish12jun12,1,6612438.story

LIFESTYLE changes can boost the health and well-being of heart

patients, proponents of such programs have long said. Now Medicare

has acknowledged that as well.

The federal insurance program will now pay for the intensive cardiac

rehabilitation plans created by preventive health guru Dr. Dean

Ornish and mind-body medicine pioneer Dr. Herbert Benson — the first

time the federal government has agreed to reimburse consumers for

specific lifestyle intervention programs.

" This exciting breakthrough could change the face of medical care, "

said Ornish in a statement.

He and Benson have been working for years to obtain Medicare

reimbursement for their cardiac wellness programs because it's seen

as a critical first step to making their programs more widely

available — and getting other insurance providers to pay for them as

well.

Both have conducted clinical research demonstrating that

comprehensive lifestyle changes — including support groups; good

nutrition and low-fat diets; exercise; and stress management, such as

yoga, meditation or deep breathing — may begin to reverse even severe

coronary heart disease without drugs or surgery.

Ornish's Program for Reversing Heart Disease is offered at eight

sites in Pennsylvania and at five medical centers in West Virginia.

At least one private insurer in each state already has agreed to

cover the programs in those states.

Cardiac wellness programs by Benson, who more than 25 years ago wrote

the groundbreaking " Relaxation Response, " are offered in Indiana,

Rhode Island, Tennessee, Washington and Virginia.

Considered by many to be the father of meditation in this country,

Benson has shown that 10 minutes of meditative technique a day can

increase concentration and counteract the harmful effects of stress,

such as high blood pressure and strokes.

His Cardiac Wellness Program combines these stress reduction

techniques with nutrition, cognitive restructuring and exercise to

lower cholesterol and blood pressure. Patients report fewer symptoms

of chest pain.

Medicare, however, will not cover enrollment in the programs for as

long as both centers frequently recommend. Instead, it will guarantee

coverage for 36 sessions within an 18-week period, with a possible

extension to 72 sessions for 36 weeks. The final details of how much

will be covered are still under negotiation, Ornish said.

Although Medicare already pays for some cardiac rehabilitation

programs, officials hailed the inclusion of both programs as an

important shift toward preventive rather than rehabilitative

medicine.

As of March, the definition of who can take advantage of the cardiac

rehab benefit under Medicare has been expanded from conditions such

as acute myocardial infarction (heart attack) and coronary artery

bypass graft to include patients with less severe heart conditions,

such as valve replacement.

" The programs of Dr. Ornish and Dr. Benson focus on a prevention

model, " said a spokesperson with the Centers for Medicare and

Medicaid Services. " Now we are going to take even individuals with

mild cardiovascular disease and show them how to ameliorate it or

reverse it to avoid more serious disease. "

Although the details of coverage have not been finalized, doctors who

run similar lifestyle intervention programs to treat and prevent

heart disease supported the move.

" It is just phenomenal that Medicare has decided to cover these

programs since Medicare sets the precedent for all of the other

insurance companies, " said Dr. Mimi Guarneri, a cardiologist who co-

founded and runs the Scripps Center for Integrative Medicine in La

Jolla.

" What's really important is this is truly shifting the paradigm of

healthcare from focusing on chronic disease to focusing on

prevention. "

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