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Report: Uncompensated Care Payments Insufficiently Aligned With Uncompensated Costs

Some of the payments Medicare makes to hospitals to help them with their uncompensated care costs are not well-aligned with actual hospital uncompensated care costs, the U.S. Government Accountability Office has concluded.
gaoIn a new report based on FY 2013 and FY 2014 data, the GAO found that

Medicare UC [uncompensated care] payments are not well aligned with hospital uncompensated care costs for two reasons. First, payments are largely based on hospitals’ Medicaid workload rather than actual hospital uncompensated care costs…Second, CMS [the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services] does not account for hospitals’ Medicaid payments that offset uncompensated care costs when making Medicare UC payments.

Medicare uncompensated payments to hospitals also are sometimes as Medicare disproportionate share (Medicare DSH) uncompensated care payments.
To address this problem, the GAO recommends that CMS

  • improve alignment of Medicare UC payments with hospital uncompensated care costs
  • account for Medicaid payments made when making Medicare UC payments to individual hospitals

The report notes that CMC agreed with these recommendations.
Pennsylvania’s safety-net hospitals typically receive Medicare uncompensated care payments.
To learn more about what the GAO found and what its implications might be for hospitals, go here for a link to the new GAO report Hospital Uncompensated Care: Federal Action Needed to Better Align Payments with Costs and to a summary of that report.

2016-08-05T06:00:54+00:00August 5th, 2016|Medicare, Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals|Comments Off on Report: Uncompensated Care Payments Insufficiently Aligned With Uncompensated Costs

DSH Losses Will Hurt Safety-Net Hospitals

Safety-net and other hospitals will suffer financially when Affordable Care Act-mandated cuts in Medicare disproportionate share hospital payments (Medicare DSH) and Medicaid DSH payments begin taking effect in FY 2014.
So concludes Moody’s, the bond-rating agency.
The losses will be especially harmful to hospitals in states that do not expand their Medicaid programs and to safety-net hospitals, Moody’s believes.
Currently, Pennsylvania has no plans to expand its Medicaid program as envisioned by the Affordable Care Act.
Hospitals face other specific challenges as well as a result of these cuts.
Read more about Moody’s assessment of the impact of future Medicare DSH and Medicaid DSH cuts in this reportFinancial graphs in Becker’s Hospital Review.

2013-03-20T06:00:57+00:00March 20th, 2013|Health care reform|Comments Off on DSH Losses Will Hurt Safety-Net Hospitals
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