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NPR waking up to a story that seems fairly dated: sleep lab testing costs a lot of money and sleep docs stand to gain from that.  I am given to believe that the opposite is more the case now that home testing is gaining momentum.  Here's the article:

Snoring was once considered a simple annoyance for bed partners, but there is a growing awareness in the medical community that the grunts and snorts of noisy sleepers can also be a sign of sleep apnea.

It's a condition shown to increase the risk of several serious illnesses, including heart disease, stroke and dementia. Critics, however, worry that overnight tests to diagnoseapnea, particularly those done in sleep labs, may be over-prescribed, at great cost to the health care system.

Testing can be a lucrative business, and labs have popped up in free-standing clinics and hospitals across the country. Over the past decade, the number of accredited sleep labs that test for the disorder has quadrupled, according to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine.

At the same time, insurer spending on the procedure has skyrocketed. Medicare payments for sleep testing increased from $62 million in 2001 to $235 million in 2009, according to the Office of the Inspector General.
 
Sleep apnea occurs when the muscles in the back of the throat relax. That causes an airway obstruction that can stop a person's breathing for several seconds — even minutes. It causes restless sleep and, sometimes, dangerously-low blood oxygen levels. The disorder can be diagnosed by monitoring a snorer's sleep patterns, either in an overnight visit to a sleep lab or at home using a portable testing device. It's then often treated with a CPAP machine that helps keep a snorer's airway open during sleep.

Sleep apnea has likely become more common because the population has grown older and more obese — two major risk factors for the disorder. The National Institutes of Health estimates that more than 12 million Americans suffer from the apnea. Many are never diagnosed.

"The medical community is sort of dropping the ball," Dr. David Gross, medical director of the sleep lab at the National Rehabilitation Hospital in Washington, D.C., says. "It's just sad when you walk through the hospital and you see these patients with heart failure — the person might be 35 years old, he's 350 pounds — but no one's thinking that he has sleep apnea, which he statistically does." Gross says more than three-quarters of the patients who come to his lab are diagnosed with apnea.


Dr. David Gross, medical director of the sleep lab at the National Rehabilitation Hospital in Washington, D.C., says more than three-quarters of the patients who come to his lab are diagnosed with apnea.

But the testing isn't cheap: Each night at a hospital sleep lab can cost $1,900 and is usually mostly covered by a patient's health insurance. Some patients end up spending two nights at the lab — one to test for apnea and the second to try the CPAP machine.
Dr. Fred Holt, an expert on fraud and abuse and a medical director of Blue Cross Blue Shield in North Carolina, says some patients aren't having basic exams done first and are therefore being prescribed expensive tests they don't need. Not everyone who snores has a chronic disorder, he says. In other cases, Holt says, the labs prescribe CPAP machines right away without first suggesting other strategies that could reduce apnea, such as losing weight or sleeping on your side.

"We are spending more and more money on sleep testing and treatment," he says, "and like anything else in health care, there are unscrupulous people out there who are more than happy to do testing and treatment that might be of questionable value. This might be because of naiveté on the part of the physician, or unfortunately, it could be done for the sake of improving the cash flow of the business."

It's no secret that the sleep business can be lucrative for physicians. A website for Aviisha, a sleep testing company, has a special page for physicians showing a picture of a doctor with a stack of money in his lab coat pocket. And in February, the American Academy of Sleep Medicine is offering a seminar on the "business of sleep medicine for physicians" at a golf resort in Arizona.

While many sleep centers offer comprehensive care for sleep disorders, others are largely focused on overnight sleep testing, according to Dr. Nancy Collop, president of the academy. "A lot of people have gotten into the sleep business specifically to do that procedure," she says. The goal of the academy's accreditation process, she says, is to make sure sleep labs are offering more, because "many patients may not even need a sleep study."

Helen Darling, president of the National Business Group on Health, which represents large employers offering health insurance to their workers, says the tests are driving up the cost of premiums. "This is a good example of something where we have technology, we have financial incentives to use more of it then we've historically done. You have enough problems, including a growing obesity epidemic, and you sort of put together the so-called perfect storm for driving up overuse and health care costs."

Doctors should focus instead on common-sense approaches to sleep apnea, she says, like losing weight, before turning to expensive testing and medical devices.

Another option is a home sleep test, which costs less than a fifth as much as a lab test, and is considered effective for most patients. Medicare began paying for home sleep tests in 2008, but the tests have had only modest growth.

"I believe lab tests, as opposed to the home tests, are being wildly overprescribed," says Michael Backus, senior vice president of American Imaging Management, a subsidiary of WellPoint.

Right now, 99 percent of the sleep tests given to WellPoint patients are done in the lab, he says, but "it should be 70 percent at home and 30 percent in the lab." Backus adds that the majority of patients who are diagnosed with apnea and then given CPAP machines stop using them within the first year.

Some insurers, including WellPoint, are changing the way they pay for sleep testing to curb the costs. Many now require a special pre-authorization. They also ask the doctor whether a patient qualifies for a home sleep test instead of one at the lab. Those changes are now widespread among Massachusetts insurers and are having an effect on the sleep industry in the state.

Dr. Lawrence Epstein, the chief medical officer of Sleep HealthCenters in Massachusetts, says the labs have already experienced a 20 percent drop in the number of patients coming in for testing. While the past decade was focused on industry growth, he says it's "now going to be about consolidation and provision of better quality, more efficient care."
Sleep HealthCenters has shut down three of its 15 sleep labs, and more closures may be on the way. Epstein says the company is focusing more on "sleep wellness," including treating and managing sleep disorders, and less on testing. The key, he says, is to become more efficient without decreasing access to care for patients who need it.

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I read all of this with mixed feelings.

I had been to any number of doctors trying to find out the reason for my extreme exhaustion AND I knew that I slept very, very poorly. Constant wake-ups throughout the night, etc., etc.

Finally, at a friend's urging, I went to New York City's Sleep Disorders Institute. The doctor never recommended an overnight study. Instead, I was advised that I had insomnia and was given sleep hygiene techniques and approaches. I suspect one reason the doctors never came up with even a tentative diagnosis for me is that I don't fit the SA profile: While I'm middle age, I'm not male or overweight.

I wish Sleep Disorders Institute clinic had been more interested in making money and thus ordered an overnight study!

I was finally diagnosed by a friend when we shared a hotel room. She knew about sleep apnea and knew its symptoms. My breathing pauses -- long ones -- snoring and sudden snorts as I roused enough to resume breathing telegraphed my condition. She also knew about my tiredness and visit to Sleep Disorders Institute.

I got home that weekend and called Sleep Medicine Associates (which happened to be on my own street) to make an appointment. Dr. Burschtin ordered an overnight and I took the first slot that opened a day or two later.

The overnight study revealed a borderline severe sleep apnea condition. I was thrilled to have an answer, finally, to my sleep problem.

I've been seeing doctors for some 20 years trying to get an answer to my extreme fatigue and sleepiness. I never once heard the words "sleep apnea" breathed by any doctor.

The Health Care system is broken for sure. But how can there be any fraud during a well documented Sleep Study? They hook a person up from head to toe and video tape it. So How is it that the sleep study itself be fraudulent?

And as for the Director of BCBS, Dr. Fred Holt  to suggest a person "lose weight" and "sleep on their side" as a solution- sounds so ludicrious. I wonder how much money they pay him to save BCBS's money!

Truthfully, I didn't really understand the article- I just couldn't get the jist of what they were saying.  The number of free standing labs may have increased, but we keep hearing how many people are undiagnosed and about long waits for a sleep test.  If Sleep Medicine is a cash cow it's  not any different from any other brance of medicine.

Off the topic:

What did disturb me is the number of CPAPs that end up in the closet.  Probably insurance is still paying on them.  What a waste of money and what a shame those folks didn't get the support they needed to be compliant.  Still, not everyone is going to follow Doctors orders if it's inconvenient or a bit of work.  This is why I oppose encouraging every new person to buy the cadillac of machines (though data capable is necessary if you wish to follow your numbers).  They may be gung-ho in the beginning and quickly lose interest when a miracle doesn't happen overnight, or a mask problem stops them cold. 

One thing that really helped me (and no matter what, I planned to stick with my CPAP) was stumbling into A.W.A.K.E. meetings (thanks, Mike) and this (and other) sleep apnea forums.

It would be useful/helpful if doctors let their patients know about these sources of help and information. My doctor, who is otherwise quite responsive, did not let me know that such wonderful resources exist.

btw, the article was poorly written and confusing.

I think docs do not tell us about support meetings (my doc diud not even mention the one at his hospital) or forums because they don't know about them, don't think about it, and if they understand the purposes of the forums, don't want us to know how to adjust our machines.

I can kind of understand their reluctance to steer someone to a forum that will teach them how to adjust their own pressure (I shudder at every newbie with six months or less and no understanding of what they are doing changing their settings because they can).  Still the help on other issues, especially fitting the mask can be a deal breaker.
 
ZolliStar said:

One thing that really helped me (and no matter what, I planned to stick with my CPAP) was stumbling into A.W.A.K.E. meetings (thanks, Mike) and this (and other) sleep apnea forums.

It would be useful/helpful if doctors let their patients know about these sources of help and information. My doctor, who is otherwise quite responsive, did not let me know that such wonderful resources exist.

btw, the article was poorly written and confusing.

From my experience, the home test did reveal desats down to 83, but the interpretation was that this was "basically normal, might want to exclude pulmonary disease". Here I am, an extremely athletic, thin 56 y/o woman and the test is written off as "normal". So I asked for the lab test. After two hours, the doctor was called to start CPAP as the desats were in the low 60s. So the insurance only paid for the one lab night. This seems reasonable to do a split night study to save on costs.Home tests can only be reliable if those who interpret use the parameters of desat of 4-5% are significant. 

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