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Primary Care Spending Declines Amid Health Care Cost Rise

At a time when health care costs continue to rise, spending for primary care is declining. This is the conclusion of an analysis of Health Care Cost Institute Data published on the Health Affairs Blog. According to the analysis, spending on primary health care declined six percent between 2012 and 2016 – more than twice the rate of the decline in spending for any other type of care. These results concern analysts because research shows that investment in primary care services generally improves population health at less cost. The decline is in utilization, not price, and while the reasons for [...]

2018-03-16T06:00:11-04:00March 16, 2018|Uncategorized|

New Report Details Key Health Care Provisions in February Budget Bill

The Congressional Research Service has published a new report describing the health care-related provisions in the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 that Congress passed last month to fund the federal government. A major part of that law was the Advancing Chronic Care, Extenders, and Social Services (ACCESS) Act, and the new report includes descriptions of the Medicare, Medicaid, CHIP, public health, and other health care aspects of the law. Go here to find the Congressional Research Service report Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 (P.L. 115-123): Brief Summary of Division E—The Advancing Chronic Care, Extenders, and Social Services (ACCESS) Act.

2018-03-14T06:00:47-04:00March 14, 2018|Medicaid, Medicare|

Study Looks at Medicaid and Managed Care

A new Commonwealth Fund study examines how managed care plans have tackled serving new members in Affordable Care Act-authorized Medicaid expansion states. According to the report, these managed care organizations have …focused on identifying and helping high-risk populations and addressing the social determinants of health. MCOs are testing value-based payment strategies that link payment with performance and are increasingly focused on engaging patients in their care. Leaders report common challenges: setting appropriate payment rates; managing members whose needs differ from traditional Medicaid beneficiaries; ensuring access to specialty care; and effectively implementing payment reform and practice transformation. Learn more about how [...]

2018-03-13T06:00:58-04:00March 13, 2018|Affordable Care Act, Medicaid, Medicaid managed care|

Non-Profit Rating Downgrades Exceeded Upgrades in 2017

Moody’s downgraded more non-profit hospital credit ratings than it raised in 2017. The credit-rating company attributed the downgrades to nursing shortages in some markets and rising pharmaceutical and supplies costs. Nearly a third of the downgrades were in just two states:  Ohio and Pennsylvania. Learn more about Moody’s 2017 downgrades and upgrades in this report from Becker’s Hospital Review.

2018-03-12T09:49:18-04:00March 12, 2018|hospitals|

MACPAC Meets

Members of the Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission met in Washington, D.C. last week to discuss a number of Medicaid and CHIP meetings.  The following is MACPAC’s summary of this meeting. MACPAC’S March 2018 meeting began with a review of two draft chapters with recommendations that will be included in MACPAC’s June 2018 report, the first to improve operation of the Medicaid drug rebate program and the second to improve the clarity of substance use disorder (SUD) confidentiality regulations. At the opening session the Commission reviewed a draft chapter on Medicaid drug policy and later voted to approve [...]

Readmissions Program Working; Expansion in Order?

The Medicare hospital readmissions reduction program is working, according to the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission. And it may even be worth expanding to additional medical conditions, MedPAC members believe. According to MedPAC, hospital readmissions among patients with medical conditions covered by the readmissions reduction program have declined faster than readmissions among patients with medical conditions not covered by the program, suggesting that expanding the program to additional medical conditions could lead to an even greater reduction in the number of avoidable Medicare-covered readmissions. Learn more about changes in the readmission rate since the readmissions reduction program was introduced and whether [...]

2018-03-07T06:00:23-05:00March 7, 2018|Medicare, Medicare regulations, MedPAC|

New Bill Proposes Greater 340B Accountability

A new bill proposed last week by Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA) seeks to foster greater accountability among participants in the federal government’s section 340B prescription drug discount program. The three-page bill is called the Ensuring the Value of the 340B Program Act of 2018, and according to a news release from the senator, its purpose is to require …participating hospitals to report the total acquisition costs for drugs collected through the 340B program, as well as revenues received from all third party papers for those same drugs. The 340B program provides discounts on prescription drugs dispensed on an outpatient basis [...]

2018-03-06T06:00:51-05:00March 6, 2018|340b|

MedPAC Meets

The Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, which advises Congress on Medicare payment issues, met last week in Washington, D.C. Among the issues on MedPAC’s agenda were: paying for sequential stays in a unified Medicare payment system for post-acute care encouraging Medicare beneficiaries to use higher-quality post-acute care providers using payment policy to ensure appropriate access to and use of hospital emergency department services the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ financial alignment demonstration for dual-eligible beneficiaries the effectiveness of the Medicare hospital readmissions reduction program population-based quality measures such as preventable admissions and home and community days Go here, to MedPAC’s [...]

Lay Outreach Workers Reduce Readmissions

A community hospital in Kentucky has found that employing lay outreach workers to assist patients recently discharged from the hospital can significantly reduce hospital readmissions. In a research project, the hospital identified high-risk patients and, upon their discharge from the hospital, assigned lay outreach workers to help those patients with matters such as providing transportation, assisting during follow-up medical appointments, and navigating the health care system.  With this help, the hospital experienced a 48 percent reduction in 30-day readmissions. While the hospital needed to spend money to employ the outreach workers, the effort reduced its likelihood of being assessed penalties [...]

2018-02-28T06:00:39-05:00February 28, 2018|Medicare, Medicare regulations|

States Adopt New Tools to Control Rising Medicaid Drug Costs

Faced with continued increases in the cost of prescription drugs in their Medicaid programs, states are pursuing new approaches in attempts to control those rising costs. In the past states have employed approaches such as beneficiary prescription limits, negotiating supplemental rebates from manufacturers, requiring prior authorization, implementing state maximum allowable cost programs, and operating preferred drug lists. Recently, however, states are turning to a number of new mechanisms to limit the growth of Medicaid prescription drug costs, including: introducing spending growth caps for Medicaid prescription drug costs, with unplanned increases in spending triggering a closer look at overall drug spending [...]

2018-02-27T06:00:14-05:00February 27, 2018|Medicaid|
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