AHA today voiced support for a provision in the Lower Costs, More Transparency Act (H.R. 5378) that would suspend for two years the Medicaid disproportionate share hospital reductions scheduled to go into effect on Oct. 1, but urged House leaders to reject another provision that would permanently implement reductions to Medicare payments for drug administration services in off-campus hospital outpatient departments. 
 
“Existing site-neutral payment cuts have already had a significantly negative impact on the financial sustainability of hospitals and health systems and have contributed to Medicare’s chronic failure to cover the cost of caring for its beneficiaries,” AHA wrote. “This proposal would expand upon these shortfalls, further exacerbating the financial challenges facing many hospitals and threaten patients’ access to quality care.”
 
Among other changes, AHA said the legislation should allow hospitals to continue using price estimator tools to meet the shoppable services requirement as allowed under the Hospital Price Transparency Rule and permit CMS to continue to determine the maximum penalty assessed to noncompliant hospitals, rather than set a maximum amount in statute; and remove unnecessary and burdensome provisions that would establish unique identifiers for off-campus HOPDs and require 340B entities to report the difference between their acquisition cost and payments from Medicaid managed care organizations.

Related News Articles

Headline
Site-neutral policies fail to recognize that not all sites of care are created equal, writes AHA President and CEO Rick Pollack in a letter to the editor…
Headline
The AHA June 17 participated in a virtual panel discussion hosted by KFF about site-neutral payment. Participants included Ashley Thompson, AHA senior vice…
Headline
The AHA June 14 released a new myth vs. fact document pushing back on several claims some organizations continue to make related to proposals that would impose…
Headline
The Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission (MACPAC) June 11 released its June report to Congress. The first chapter focuses on improving the…
Headline
A blog expanding on AHA's initial response last week to the RAND Corporation's latest hospital pricing report notes, "The AHA has previously highlighted…
Blog
The RAND Corporation recently released the fifth iteration of its biannual hospital price report. The AHA has previously highlighted significant flaws with…