The Proposed FY 2014 State Budget: Part 4 of 7
Medical Assistance Supplemental Payments
Last Tuesday, Pennsylvania Governor Tom Corbett unveiled his proposed state FY 2014 budget. Later that day, members of the Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania (SNAP) received a comprehensive memo outlining the governor’s budget proposal with an emphasis on the issues that matter most to the state’s 61 private safety-net hospitals.
Over a seven-day period, SNAP presents in this space the highlights of the governor’s budget, again with an emphasis on Medical Assistance and other matters of special interest to Pennsylvania’s safety-net hospitals. Today, SNAP takes a look at what the proposed budget says about Medical Assistance supplemental payments.
Governor Corbett has proposed no change in the state’s spending on OB/NICU, burn center, and trauma center payments. Because of the reduction in the state’s federal medical assistance percentage (FMAP, or the rate at which the federal government matches state Medicaid spending), total payments to hospitals in each of these programs stands to decline 1.7 percent.
The total amount available for tobacco uncompensated care payments is slated for a 3.3 percent decrease, from $56.5 million to $54.7 million. This reflects two factors: a 1.7 percent decrease in money available from the tobacco settlement fund and the state’s reduced FMAP rate.
While total funding for physician practice plans is slated for an 18.9 percent decrease, this appears to reflect a decision to remove from this category one hospital that was added to the group last year. This would mean funding for physician practice plans would remain the same – as it would for academic medical center disproportionate share hospital payments (DSH).
Critical access hospital payments have been targeted for a $500,000 cut in state funds.
Inpatient DSH, outpatient DSH, medical education, and Community Access Fund payments do not have their own line-items in the proposed budget and therefore cannot be specifically identified in that budget. Traditionally, however, when an administration is contemplating changes in these payments, it indicates so in the programmatic revision commentary section of the budget document. In the case of these four payments that are so vital to so many Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals, they were not mentioned in the programmatic revision commentary.
Next Monday: Other Medical Assistance Issues