COVID-19

FEDERAL HEALTH POLICY UPDATE FOR December 1

The following is the latest health policy news from the federal government for the week of November 28 to December 1.  Some of the language used below is taken directly from government documents. 340B HHS and its Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) have proposed revising the current 340B administrative dispute resolution process.  Since the current process was introduced in 2020 HRSA has encountered policy and operational challenges with its implementation and now proposes revising it and is soliciting comment on its proposed new approach.  Changes include changing the nature of the dispute resolution process, using different kinds of professionals [...]

States Seek Certainty on End of PHE

The country’s states want a clearer idea of when the official COVID-19 public health emergency will end – and along with it, the continuous Medicaid eligibility that remains a major component of the federal attempt to ensure health care coverage for millions of Americans during the pandemic. Even though two administrations have now regularly renewed the PHE for three-month periods and the current administration has promised governors 60 days’ notice of when the PHE will end, the nation’s Medicaid directors have written to congressional leaders asking for Congress to “…provide states with certainty around the end of the Medicaid continuous [...]

2022-11-30T06:00:58-05:00November 30, 2022|COVID-19, Medicaid|

Federal Health Policy Update for November 17

The following is the latest health policy news from the federal government for the week of November 11 to 17.  Some of the language used below is taken directly from government documents. Provider Relief Fund Providers that cited extenuating circumstances for failing to submit Provider Relief Fund financial reports on time for reporting period 3 and were approved to submit their reports late must submit those late reports by December 2.  Learn more here. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services CMS has posted three downloadable sample formats that hospitals can use to meet federal requirements for posting in a machine-readable [...]

117th Congress’s Waning Hours

In addition to its biggest challenge – funding the federal government, authorization for which ends on December 16 – Congress has a number of health care issues on its agenda that at least some lawmakers and health care industry stakeholders would like to see it address before the year ends. Those issues include the cut in Medicare payments to physicians scheduled to take place on January 1; the desire of many to make permanent some of the flexibilities to use telehealth that were temporarily authorized in response to the COVID-19 public health emergency; additional pandemic funding for new vaccines, new [...]

Federal Health Policy Update for November 10

The following is the latest health policy news from the federal government for the week of November 7 to 10.  Some of the language used below is taken directly from government documents. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services CMS has published a notice advising teaching hospitals that they have until November 18 to ask Medicare to reconsider their per resident amounts or resident caps as shown in the Hospital Cost Report Information System (HCRIS) associated with cost reports that, as of July 1, 2022, were not reopenable.  Learn more from this CMS notice. Due to an unplanned system outage of [...]

FEDERAL HEALTH POLICY UPDATE FOR November 3

The following is the latest health policy news from the federal government for the week of October 31 to November 3.  Some of the language used below is taken directly from government documents. Medicare Payment Regulations In the past week CMS has published four regulations presenting how it will pay providers in the coming year. Outpatient prospective payment system – CMS announced a 3.8 percent increase for Medicare outpatient and ambulatory surgical payments.  It also adopted its proposal to establish rural emergency hospitals as a new kind of hospital provider; removed 11 surgical procedures from its inpatient-only list and authorized [...]

Federal Health Policy Update for October 27

The following is the latest health policy news from the federal government for the week of October  21 to October 27.  Some of the language used below is taken directly from government documents. 340B Responding to a federal court ruling that the federal government has shortchanged hospitals in its payments for 340B-covered prescription drugs, CMS has announced how it will compensate hospitals for its underpayments – at least for the 2023 fiscal year.  According to CMS, it “…will apply the default rate (generally ASP plus 6%) to 340B-acquired drugs for the rest of the year.  CMS also will reprocess claims [...]

Results of Annual Survey of State Medicaid Programs

The Kaiser Family Foundation has published the results of its annual survey of state Medicaid programs for the 2022 and 2023 fiscal years.  Among the survey’s findings (in language taken directly from the Kaiser report): More than 3/4 of states that contract with MCOs [managed care organizations] enroll ≥75% of all beneficiaries in MCOs Some states reported newly implementing or expanding MCO programs States also report continued use of other service delivery and payment system reforms Two-thirds of states are using strategies to improve race, ethnicity, and language data About one-quarter of states are tying MCO financial incentives to health [...]

FEDERAL HEALTH POLICY UPDATE FOR OCTOBER 20

The following is the latest health policy news from the federal government for the week of October 14 to October 20.  Some of the language used below is taken directly from government documents. White House President Biden has signed an executive order on lowering prescription drug costs.  The order directs HHS to consider additional actions to further drive down prescription drug costs, encourages it to pursue such actions through its Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI), and directs HHS to submit a formal report within 90 days outlining any plans to use CMMI’s authority to lower drug costs and [...]

COVID Pandemic: It’s Over? It’s Not?

An average of 400 daily COVID-related deaths. The potential loss of access to telehealth services. The need to redetermine Medicaid eligibility for people who benefited from the loosening of eligibility standards under the 2020 Family First Coronavirus Response Act. The upcoming commercialization of COVID vaccines. A promise to the nation’s governors of 60 days’ advance notice. These are among the reasons the federal government recently extended the declaration of the COVID-19 public health emergency for another 90 days. Becker’s Hospital Review takes a closer look at these and other reasons for the public health emergency’s extension in the article “HHS [...]

2022-10-18T06:00:47-04:00October 18, 2022|COVID-19|
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