Hospitals Spar with GOP in Latest Hill Fight on Medicare Cuts

2 Min Read

Posted in CMSCorporateHealthcare Policy & The Media

Posted in CMSCorporateHealthcare Policy & The Media

The wrangling back and forth in the US legislature concerning the upcoming vote on the payroll tax cut extension (which includes a provision giving providers a two-year break on Medicare payment cuts) continues to raise the ire of acute hospitals, which would shoulder part of the financing for such an action. The amount to be financed, at the literal expense of hospitals, approaches $17 billion. Essentially, the proposed offsets to direct provider payments would come from reduced payments to hospital administrative and evaluatory functions.

House GOP leaders are in the hospitals’ crosshairs, as the hospitals complain that, under the proposal, there is little incentive for them to continue to collect other payments (copays, deductibles) in the face of such financing, compromising care delivery in the process. Republicans are quick to point out, however, hospitals did agree to major cuts in Medicare as part of reform and that overall Medicare spending would fall by less than 1 percent over the next 10 years. | LINK

Related posts:

  1. Keenly Aware of Costs to Medicare, Obama Considers Cuts to MA Plans Barack Obama is firing on all cylinders this March (the…
  2. Obama Signs Bill Delaying Medicare Payment Cuts to Physicians until April 1 Physicians — especially those of the primary care type —…
  3. Smaller Hospitals Aggressively Research Ways to Fight Consolidation You have to admire the dogged fervor smaller, independent hospitals…

 

Share This Article
Exit mobile version