The newsroom includes access to CHA News, which provides timely information to members every Monday and Thursday and is at the core of CHA benefits. In addition, it is also home to resources such as toolkits and talking points designed to help member hospitals and health systems communicate with internal and external audiences on a range of current health care-related issues. Links to CHA media statements and press releases can also be found here.
Newsroom
CHA DataSuite Releases Analysis of IPPS FFY 2018 Final Rule
CHA DataSuite has provided member hospitals and health systems with a hospital-specific analysis showing how Medicare inpatient fee-for-service payments will change from federal fiscal year (FFY) 2017 to FFY 2018 based on the policies in the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ (CMS) FFY 2018 inpatient prospective payment system (IPPS) final rule. The analysis compares the year-over-year changes in operating, capital and uncompensated care IPPS payments. It also includes breakout sections with detailed insight into specific policies that influence IPPS payment changes, including:
Potential penalties under the Inpatient Quality Reporting and Electronic Health Record Incentive programs
Expiration of the Medicare Dependent Hospital and expanded Low-Volume Hospital Adjustment programs
Quality-based payment adjustments
Disproportionate share hospital (DSH) uncompensated care (UCC) payments
CMS’ transition to the Medicare Cost Report Worksheet S-10 for UCC payments for FFY 2018
CHA Meets With CMS on Medicare Managed Care Rules
Yesterday, CHA met with representatives from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) at its headquarters in Baltimore to discuss the Medicaid managed care rules finalized in May 2016 and January 2017 and, specifically, their impact on the Quality Assurance Fee (QAF) program.
House Committee Votes to Cut Health Care Spending by $25 Billion
As part of the House budget resolution process, the Energy and Commerce Committee announced earlier today the Common Sense Savings Act of 2016 (H.R. 4725), legislation introduced by Health Subcommittee Chairman Joe Pitts (R-PA) to reduce the federal deficit by almost $25 billion through cuts to Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) and the Prevention and Public Health Fund. The legislation, opposed by CHA, would:
Eliminate the enhanced federal Medicaid matching funds available for the coverage of prisoners as a result of the Affordable Care Act’s Medicaid expansion. States would continue to be allowed to receive federal funds for Medicaid coverage for prisoner inpatient services, but at the traditional federal matching rate.
Reduce the amount of the non-federal share that can come from providers by gradually reducing the Medicaid provider tax threshold from its current 6 percent of the net patient service revenues to 5.5 percent (the amount that was in place until Oct. 1, 2011).
Eliminate the 23 percentage point increase in the CHIP matching rate implemented in the Affordable Care Act.
Repeal the Prevention and Public Health Fund, which amounts to more than $14 billion over the next 10 years.
Close a loophole in a current statute that has allowed lottery winners to retain taxpayer-financed Medicaid coverage.
Budget Trailer Bill Recognizes Alternative Quality Control in Clinical Laboratories
The budget trailer bill adopted as part of the state’s final 2015-16 budget amends Section 1220 of the Business and Professions Code pertaining to clinical laboratories. Specifically, the budget trailer bill allows clinical laboratories to establish an alternative quality control program that meets federal regulations under the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Act and that may include the use of alternative quality control testing procedures already recognized by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). Until now, the California Department of Public Health has interpreted regulations in a way that did not recognize federally approved alternative quality control methods, requiring labs to perform frequent quality control tests, which are substantially more expensive than the current federally recognized equivalent quality control (EQC) procedures and the impending individualized quality control plans (IQCPs).
Budget and SGR Reforms Advance
Last night the House of Representatives passed the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013. The Senate is expected to do so today, and the President has indicated he will sign the measure. The vote in the House was 332-62; nine Californians voted against passage. The legislation contains both good news and bad news for California’s hospitals.
Also this week, the House Ways and Means and Senate Finance Committees reported bipartisan legislation to repeal the sustainable growth rate (SGR) for physician Medicare payments. They will continue to work toward a permanent solution during the first quarter of 2014. The financing mechanisms for offsetting the cost of repeal have not been released. Payments to hospitals continue to be vulnerable as the committees look for as much at $150 billion over the next 10 years to pay for the SGR repeal.
CHA has provided the attached summary of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 with additional information about the hospital-related provisions.
CHA Members Take Hospital Message to Capitol Hill
CHA President/CEO C. Duane Dauner was joined by 10 representatives of CHA member hospitals in Washington, D.C., Dec. 3 for the CHA and American Hospital Association hospital advocacy day. The group met with about half of the California Congressional delegation, including House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, House Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy, and Sens. Boxer and Feinstein.
Duals Demo Timeline Changes Included in Proposed State Budget
Gov. Jerry Brown’s 2013-14 state budget proposal, released Jan. 10, includes a delay in implementing the Coordinated Care Initiative (CCI), which will transition individuals eligible for both Medicare and Medi-Cal —dual-eligibles — into managed care. It will also integrate long-term care services and supports into managed Medi-Cal. CCI implementation is now scheduled for September 2013, rather than June 2013 as originally planned. Under the revised timeline, beneficiaries will receive notice of changes no sooner than June 2013. Beneficiary enrollment schedules have also been modified and will vary among the designated counties: in Los Angeles County, enrollment will be phased in over 18 months; in the County of San Mateo, beneficiaries will be enrolled at once; and in Orange County, County of San Diego, County of San Bernardino, County of Riverside, Alameda County, and the County of Santa Clara, enrollment will be phased in over 12 months.
House Subcommittee Passes Labor-HHS Appropriations Bill
The House Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services (HHS), Education, and Related Agencies held a mark-up of its fiscal year 2013 appropriations bill today, reducing the HHS discretionary budget by $1.3 billion below current levels. If signed into law, the bill would restrict use of any HHS funds to implement the Affordable Care Act and would rescind funds authorized for the Consumer Operated and Oriented Plan (CO-OP) Program, Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation, Prevention and Public Health Fund and Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund. The legislation also would eliminate the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality effective Oct. 1, 2012. Members of the California congressional delegation on the subcommittee voted along party lines, with Rep. Jerry Lewis (R) joining the majority to pass the bill, and Reps. Lucille Roybal-Allard (D) and Barbara Lee (D) opposing the bill. While the legislation will likely pass the full appropriations committee, it will not pass the Senate. CHA expects a final budget to be resolved in a conference committee.
DSH Task Force Urges Congress to Protect Medicaid
CHA has joined with California’s safety-net hospitals on the Disproportionate-Share Hospital (DSH) Task Force to send a letter to members of the California congressional delegation urging them to protect the Medicaid program from any additional cuts to hospital payments. As the House searches for spending reductions to offset the elimination of cuts to defense spending, proposals have emerged to reduce states’ ability to use Medicaid provider taxes and DSH payments. These programs provide critical means for hospitals to bolster their ability to preserve health care services for the state’s most needy patients. CHA will continue to advocate against further cuts to hospitals as the House continues its budget reconciliation process. The DSH Task Force letter is attached.