Medicare

Medicare Underpayment of Hospitals Continues

Medicare paid hospitals only 82 percent of what they spent caring for Medicare patients in 2022, according to a new analysis. That amounted to a Medicare payment shortfall of nearly $100 billion. Learn more about these numbers, how they were calculated, and what they mean for hospitals and their Medicare patients from the American Hospital Association report “Medicare Significantly Underpays Hospitals for Cost of Patient Care.”

2024-01-11T19:41:33-05:00January 15, 2024|hospitals, Medicare|

Expanded Mental Health Options Coming to Medicare

Beginning on January 1, Medicare beneficiaries will have access to more varied types of mental health services. At that time, mental health counselors and marriage and family therapists will become eligible to accept Medicare payments, joining the limited number of psychiatrists, psychologists, and social workers who have been serving the Medicare population as part of the first expansion of Medicare-eligible mental health providers since 1989. With Medicare planning to pay its new provider types 75 percent of what it pays psychologists, it is not clear how many of those new providers will be interested in enrolling as eligible Medicare providers.  [...]

2023-12-21T15:22:53-05:00December 26, 2023|Medicare, Medicare reimbursement policy|

Federal Health Policy Update for December 7

The following is the latest health policy news from the federal government for December 1-7.  Some of the language used below is taken directly from government documents. Congress While Congress has more than a month before the next federal funding deadline of January 19, committees are working to prepare and pass health care legislation. On the House calendar for floor votes next week is H.R. 5378, the Lower Costs, More Transparency Act.  This bill would eliminate the pending cuts to Medicaid DSH for two years (those cuts are temporarily suspended through January 19); introduce site-neutral payments for drug administration services [...]

Medicare Leaving Gaps in Care

Medicare is leaving large numbers of the program’s beneficiaries without at least some of the care they need. According to the Commonwealth Fund’s annual health care affordability survey, One-third of Medicare beneficiaries said it was difficult to afford health care costs, including more than half of beneficiaries under age 65. More than one in five beneficiaries reported delaying or skipping needed health care because of the cost, including more than four in 10 under age 65. More than one in five beneficiaries said health care costs made it harder for them to afford food and utility bills, including more than [...]

2023-11-02T06:00:32-04:00November 2, 2023|Medicare|

Telehealth Serving Some Medicare Patients Well

Medicare patients with serious mental health problems were well-served through telehealth during the COVID-19 crisis. According to a new study published by the JAMA Network, such patients experienced … 13.0% more mental health visits than those receiving care at practices that largely used in-person visits.  There were no changes in medication adherence, hospital and emergency department use, or mortality based on the extent of telemental health use. The study’s findings support continued use of telehealth for Medicare patients with mental health problems even now that the greatest threat of the pandemic has passed. Learn more about how the study was [...]

2023-11-01T13:00:57-04:00November 1, 2023|Medicare, Telehealth|

Federal Health Policy Update for August 24

The following is the latest health policy news from the federal government for August 11-24.  Some of the language used below is taken directly from government documents. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services After suspending the No Surprises Act-created Independent Dispute Resolution process in the wake of a court ruling striking down a recent increase in fees for that process, CMS has established a new rate structure for initiating the adjudication of payment disagreements between providers and payers.  It explains the new rate structure in this new FAQ, which nevertheless notes that despite the creation of new rates, the Independent [...]

Inadequate Data Hinders Federal Approach to Health Equity

Federal efforts to develop and improve payment models and other programs designed to foster health equity are often hamstrung by poor data:  inconsistent data requests from program to program and flawed and incomplete data reporting by those participating in those programs. As a result, federal policymakers often are unable to tell whether programs – both those developed specifically to address health equity and those that are not – are having the desired effect on health equity. The result, according to a new study from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, is that 1) [...]

Federal Health Policy Update for May 25

The following is the latest health policy news from the federal government for May 19-25.  Some of the language used below is taken directly from government documents. Congress The House Energy and Commerce Committee has advanced to the full House two bills with significant implications for health care providers. H.R. 3561 calls for delaying $8 billion a year in Medicaid DSH cuts for two years – cuts scheduled to take effect in October; imposing site-neutral payments for drug infusion services provided in off-campus hospital outpatient departments; imposing stronger price transparency requirements on hospitals; and requiring hospitals to report selected ownership [...]

Federal Health Policy Update for May 18

The following is the latest health policy news from the federal government for May 12-18.  Some of the language used below is taken directly from government documents. Congress The House Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee has approved and advanced five bipartisan health care bills. H.R. 3281 combined a number of proposals into a larger package and includes provisions that would: delay for two years Medicaid disproportionate share (Medicaid DSH) cuts currently scheduled to take effect on October 1; require health providers to use a unique identifier for each off-campus or remote outpatient department beginning in 2026; change how Medicare pays [...]

Federal Health Policy Update for May 11

The following is the latest health policy news from the federal government for May 5-11.  Some of the language used below is taken directly from government documents. End of the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency DeBrunner & Associates has prepared a summary of the status of selected government health care waivers and flexibilities following expiration of the COVID-19 public health emergency today.  The DeBrunner summary covers telehealth, COVID-19 treatment and coverage, flexible hospital operations, long-term-care hospitals, inpatient rehabilitation facilities and units, patient cost-sharing, and state Medicaid waivers.  Find the summary here. CMS has sent a memo to state Medicaid and CHIP [...]

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