Last week’s sudden pull of the American Health Care Act from House vote caused uncertainty around what’s next for the healthcare industry. This week, the AHLA Institute on Medicare and Medicaid Payment Issues, brought together key representatives from CMS, hospital associations and healthcare lawyers from around the nation. Here are three Medicare/Medicaid insights on current and upcoming issues:
So what can providers do to make sure any future audits of the uncompensated care data reported on S-10 go smoothly? Take a look at your charity care policies—do they match the intentions your facility has regarding financial assistance? Also, possibly rethink terms in your GL such as “self-pay discount” versus “charity care.” We have already seen S-10 audits go south related to EHR because the Medicare auditor did not view those as one and the same, so if you can, avoid those semantic traps.
In MACPAC’s first report to Congress in February 2016 regarding Medicaid DSH, they predicted the effects of the DSH Health Reform Reduction Methodology created in the 2013 regulation and found that it would not eliminate the disparities in current DSH allotments. Furthermore, 11 states could face DSH reductions greater than any ACA-related decrease in charity care and bad debt.
In addition to healthcare reform, there are also some Medicare priorities to be looking for legislation on later this year, including several provisions that are set to expire—Medicare-Dependent Hospitals, low-volume adjustments, rural home health add-on, and CHIP funding, to name a few. While Congress does not currently have a medium to pass these extensions, it is highly likely as the year progresses legislation will be introduced that works these in. A complete Medicare reform, however, is unlikely this year due to the inability to develop a consensus in Congress and the lack of legislative bandwidth—outside of Repeal & Replace, healthcare was not a top Trump priority during the election cycle.
Amidst all the uncertainty, it remains clear that healthcare transformation is not going away. All along it has been largely bipartisan supported, so while details may evolve and the pace of implementation slowed in some areas, core concepts like ACOs, bundling, and MACRA will remain.
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