Umesh A. Patel, MD LLC

Umesh A. Patel, MD LLC Diagnostic Cardiologist & Dysautonomia Specialist (diagnosing and treating Autonomic Nervous System malfunctions) Umesh A.

Patel, M.D., FACC
Board Certified Cardiologist & Internist

Dr. Umesh Patel graduated from London University Medical School, London, England in 1979, after which he completed ten years of specialist training in England and at Tulane University Medical School, before entering into private practice. Besides practicing medicine for over 41 years, he holds multiple Board Certifications and other hon

ors including leadership positions in both private practice, as well as at the hospitals. Dr. Patel's interests include diagnostic & preventative non-invasive cardiology, management of dysautonomia syndrome, hypertension, arrhythmias, lipid disorders, heart failure, and chest pain syndromes. He is open to consideration of non-traditional therapies and provides patients with natural options for disease management and promotion of wellness. For more details about Dr. Patel visit:

https://www.healthtap.com/dr-patel

https://www.linkedin.com/in/wellmd/

www.suggestadoctor.com/doctor_12655_umesharvindkumar_patel.htm

FYI ... For those who may not be aware, Dr. Courseault has now relocated and founded the The Fascia Institute to help pa...
01/10/2025

FYI ... For those who may not be aware, Dr. Courseault has now relocated and founded the The Fascia Institute to help patients with hypermobility related issues. He continues to research ways to help patients as evidenced by the below.

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1BMfS1mBkd/

✨ Big News for the New Year! ✨

We’re thrilled to highlight a groundbreaking discovery by Jacques Courseault, M.D. – the identification of Folate Dependent Hypermobility Syndrome, as published in Biomolecules! https://www.mdpi.com/2218-273X/14/4/472

This revolutionary finding shines a light on a new connection between folate metabolism and hypermobility, opening doors to improved diagnosis, treatment, and care for patients experiencing hypermobility-related conditions.

As a leader in innovative fascia research and treatment, The Fascia Institute and Treatment Center is proud to be at the forefront of advancing care for patients worldwide.

Stay tuned for more exciting updates as we continue to pioneer breakthroughs in 2025!

Hypermobility and Ehlers-Danlos Clinic

UnitedHealthcare owns CVS and expects patients to fill their prescriptions there to further maximize profits. So when pa...
01/09/2025

UnitedHealthcare owns CVS and expects patients to fill their prescriptions there to further maximize profits. So when patients’ employers switch insurance to “cheaper” United Healthcare, they have to switch from their long-term pharmacist to a new one who may not know some of the details of their previous experiences with medication‘s or their special circumstances. Excessive trust is being placed on thinking that everything is written down in a medical chart and is always transmitted accurately across medical systems and pharmacies. Unfortunately, while there are enormous profits to be made by individuals with control over healthcare, it will be difficult to change anything for the better.

05/16/2024

Researchers are learning about Ivabradine for Long-Term Effects of COVID-19 With POTS. You may be eligible to participate in the COVIVA study (near Bethesda, MD)! Compensation is provided to participants. To learn more, reach out to Clinical.research.unit.53-ggg@usuhs.edu or (301) 318-6024.

05/05/2024

Good luck in finding a fully trained MD for your heart care once you turn 65 and go on Medicare! These unfair and arbitrary cuts come as government continues its wasteful spending in our elected leaders pet 'pork' projects.

As a result, many medical business are having to resort to charging patients directly for services which are being done on their 'free' time. Individuals talking to their representatives can change this sorry situation.

Medicare reimbursement down 29% for cardiologists, 58% for heart surgeons
Michael Walter | April 29, 2024 | Cardiovascular Business | Cardiac Surgery
Medicare money payment reimbursement dollar decline. More than 100 U.S. medical societies are throwing their support behind a new proposal that could reform out-of-date Medicare policies and help limit future payment cuts.
Physician reimbursement for Medicare patients decreased 2.3% from 2005 to 2021 when accounting for inflation, according to new research out of the Harvey L. Neiman Health Policy Institute. Reimbursements actually increased during that time for some specialties, but cardiac surgery, thoracic surgery and cardiology all experienced significant declines.

The Medicare Physician Free Schedule and other Medicare programs are currently required to remain budget neutral, meaning increases in one area must be offset by decreases in another. To learn more about how this rule impacts specific specialties, researchers with the Neiman Institute explored aggregated data for 100% of Medicare Part B claims from 2005 to 2021. The group shared its full analysis in INQUIRY: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing.[1]

“While the explicit purpose of statutory freezes and budget neutrality is to control Medicare spending, the question we explored is, how has utilization changed for services from various specialties and provider types?” wrote first author Eric W. Christensen, PhD, research director with the Neiman Institute, and colleagues. “It is expected that continued erosion of Medicare reimbursement will eventually become an access issue for Medicare beneficiaries.”

Christensen et al. found that 16 healthcare specialties experienced reimbursement declines from 2005 to 2021 when accounting for inflation. This included cardiology, cardiac surgery, thoracic surgery, radiology, psychiatry, urology, internal medicine and others. Cardiac surgery saw the most significant drop in reimbursements for Medicare patients (57.6%). Thoracic surgery reimbursements fell 41.5%, meanwhile, and cardiology reimbursements fell 29%.

Only three of those 16 specialties—general surgery, thoracic surgery and cardiac surgery—did so without also experiencing a rise in relative value units (RVUs).

The group also found that payments to nonphysicians—nurse practitioners, for example, jumped 206.5% from 2005 to 2021. Payments to limited-license physicians (16.3%) and medical suppliers (44.4%) are also on the rise.

What do these trends mean for physicians going forward? Joshua Hirsch, MD, vice chair of procedural services at Massachusetts General Hospital and a senior research fellow with the Neiman Institute, thinks the U.S. insurance marketplace could see a dramatic shift if budget neutrality policies remain in place.

“While reducing physician payments can help to contain Medicare expenditures, it may also lead to unintended consequences for patients” he said in a statement. “Continued decline of Medicare reimbursement relative to reimbursement by private insurance incentivizes providers to favor privately insured patients. Our study pinpoints the extent to which real decreases in reimbursement are occurring despite greater consumption of care. We hope this study will motivate policymakers to find a solution that inures to the benefit of the Medicare insured population who are at risk for diminishing access to care.”

Read the full analysis in INQUIRY: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing.

The Neiman Institute was founded by the American College of Radiology in 2012. Click here to learn more.

Related Content:
Critics call out ‘woefully inadequate’ CMS proposal for inpatient Medicare payments
ACC, SCAI say new funding bill did not do enough to limit Medicare reimbursement cuts to cardiology services
How a big CMS update on carotid stenting could impact interventional cardiology
Heart surgery prices vary from one part of the US to the next
ASNC president advocates for Medicare reimbursement reform
Reference:

1. Eric W. Christensen, PhD, Gregory N. Nicola, MD, Joshua A. Hirsch, MD, et al. Medicare Volume Growth and Shift in Payments From Physicians to Non-Physician Practitioners Under Statutory Budget Neutrality. INQUIRY: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing. April 26, 2024.

Michael Walter
Michael Walter, Managing Editor
Michael has more than 16 years of experience as a professional writer and editor. He has written at length about cardiology, radiology, artificial intelligence and other key healthcare topics.

Many patients share this unfortunate experience and improved medical education is a must to change things.
04/25/2024

Many patients share this unfortunate experience and improved medical education is a must to change things.

'If this helps just one person, it’s worth sharing' - Jessica

"I know I am early, but May is Ehlers-Danlos Syndromes (EDS) and Hypermobility Spectrum Disorders (HSD) Awareness Month, a month dedicated to raising awareness for people worldwide with these complex, multisystemic conditions.

I’m not one to share what’s happening in my personal life, so this has been giving me some anxiety, but if this helps just one person with similar symptoms, then it’s worth sharing what I’ve been struggling with nearly all my life.

I remember sitting in the geneticist’s office, on my own, after she had done a full body examination, and she just casually said, ‘Oh yes, you have EDS; here’s a leaflet; I’ll write to your GP and good luck.'

Since then, the only medical person who has been helpful is my physio, who has helped me massively as my muscles were all basically deteriorating after years of never being active, as my joints were doing all the moving.

Apart from my physio, my cardiologist has also been helping by giving me countless monitors to wear, one of which I have worn every day for 4 months – he was able to conclude that I have POTS (this is another comorbidity of EDS & comes with all its fun quirks like fainting, not being able to regulate my body temperature, palpitations, blurred vision, brain fog to name a few…) my cardiologist was the one who got the ball rolling with my EDS diagnosis."

Read Jessica's story of chronic widespread pain, extreme fatigue, and unexplained bruising that eventually led to a diagnosis of hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (hEDS) after 29 years of symptoms: https://www.ehlers-danlos.com/story/jessica-c/

One click sign on to join a petition from Dysautonomia International to Congress to fund more medical training to help p...
04/23/2024

One click sign on to join a petition from Dysautonomia International to Congress to fund more medical training to help patients with autonomic and associated disorders.

The organization is making progress in this direction and needs your help as every person who signs on pushes congress to do the right thing.

I just asked my Congressional members to fund and clinician education. Visit bit.ly/DysEducation to do the same! It only takes a minute.

04/23/2024

At The Dysautonomia Project, we know managing autonomic disorders can be difficult and overwhelming. That’s why we’ve created DysCourse: Tools for Managing Autonomic Disorders! DysCourse is a special patient and caregiver event that puts vital education directly in the hands of those who need it...

04/20/2024

Quick video to explain hypermobility and EDS, which is often missed by clinicians while hiding in plain sight

Sign the petition so more clinicians can get trained to help people with autonomic dysfunction and associated disorders
04/20/2024

Sign the petition so more clinicians can get trained to help people with autonomic dysfunction and associated disorders

US friends, have you emailed Congress yet to ask them to fund dysautonomia clinician education, so we can reduce diagnostic delays and improve access to care for over 40 million Americans living with autonomic disorders? It only takes 40 seconds using our easy tool to email Congress at bit.ly/DysEducation

After you take action, check out our live map of Dysautonomia Advocacy in Action! https://p2a.co/visual/map/Uis9joj We have collectively sent nearly 8,000 messages to Congress, but we're aiming to get it up to 20,000 this week. Can you help us spread the word?

Great reference book for Patients with dysautonomia and associated conditions such as hyper mobility and mast cell activ...
04/20/2024

Great reference book for Patients with dysautonomia and associated conditions such as hyper mobility and mast cell activation syndrome

FDA approves use of Wegovy in certain patients who have had a heart attack or stroke, for weight loss as this is a contr...
04/16/2024

FDA approves use of Wegovy in certain patients who have had a heart attack or stroke, for weight loss as this is a contributing factor to the other condition.

CMS will allow health plans under Medicare Part D to cover Wegovy and similar drugs if they land FDA approval for an additional indication.

Chilling out rather than blowing off steam is a better way to manage anger.
04/11/2024

Chilling out rather than blowing off steam is a better way to manage anger.

Activities such as deep breathing, muscle relaxation, yoga and meditation help people manage their anger, according to a meta-analysis of studies involving more than 10,000 participants.

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39 Starbrush Circle
Covington, LA
70433

Opening Hours

Monday 8:30am - 4:30pm
Tuesday 8:30am - 4:30pm
Wednesday 8:30am - 4:30pm
Thursday 8:30am - 4:30pm
Friday 8:30am - 4pm

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