SNAPShots

SNAPShots

MedPAC: Small Pay Raise for Hospital Inpatient, Outpatient Services

The independent agency that advises Congress on Medicare payment matters has recommended modest increases in Medicare payments for hospital inpatient and outpatient services in FY 2018.
The Medicare Payment Advisory Commission voted in support of a market basket increase of approximately 1.85 percent for Medicare outpatient and inpatient services in FY 2018.
new medpacMedPAC also voted to recommend a 0.5 percent increase in payments to physicians but no increase for ambulatory surgery centers.
MedPAC will formally submit its recommendations to Congress in March.
Learn more about these and other MedPAC recommendations for changes in Medicare provider reimbursement in this article on the Provider web site.

2017-01-20T06:00:54+00:00January 20th, 2017|Medicare|Comments Off on MedPAC: Small Pay Raise for Hospital Inpatient, Outpatient Services

MedPAC Talks Payments

At public meetings in Washington, D.C. last week, members of the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission discussed the adequacy of current Medicare payments and whether they need updating in the next fiscal year.
new medpacAmong the payment areas MedPAC reviewed were inpatient services, outpatient services, physician and health professional services, ambulatory surgical center services, skilled nursing facilities, home health services, inpatient rehabilitation hospitals, long-term-care facilitiies, outpatient dialysis services, and hospices.
Find the issue briefs and presentations used to guide these discussions here, on MedPAC’s web site.

2016-12-13T06:00:37+00:00December 13th, 2016|Medicare|Comments Off on MedPAC Talks Payments

MedPAC Offers DSH, 340B Recommendations

The Medicare Payment Advisory Commission has recommended that Congress direct changes in the 340B prescription drug discount program and in the manner in which Medicare makes disproportionate share hospital payments (Medicare DSH).
In its annual report to Congress, MedPAC recommended a reduction in 340B prescription drug payments to hospitals. The proposed reduction would cut 340B program spending approximately $300 million.
medpac-dataMedPAC then recommended that those 340B savings be redirected to the Medicare DSH uncompensated care pool.
And it also called for distributing the money in that pool based on better data on the uncompensated care hospitals provide, as reported on hospitals’ Medicare cost report S-10 worksheets, so that the Medicare DSH uncompensated care program would “…better target additional payments to hospitals that provide above average shares of uncompensated care.”
Most Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals participate in both the 340B and Medicaid DSH programs.
To learn more about these and other MedPAC recommendations, see the news release that accompanied the MedPAC report to Congress; a fact sheet on that report; and the report itself.

2016-03-23T06:00:39+00:00March 23rd, 2016|Medicare|Comments Off on MedPAC Offers DSH, 340B Recommendations

MedPAC Meets, Discusses Payment Issues

Last week the commissioners serving on the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) met in Washington, D.C. to discuss the group’s future recommendations to Congress.
 
While MedPAC’s recommendations are not binding on Congress or the administration, they are highly respected and often find themselves worked into new law or regulations.
medpacAmong the issues MedPAC addressed during two days of public meetings were:

  • Medicare inpatient and outpatient payments
  • the Medicare Advantage program star rating system
  • payments to ambulatory surgery centers, skilled nursing facilities, inpatient rehabilitation facilities, and long-term care hospitals
  • payments for physician services, home health services, hospice care, and outpatient dialysis

Find issue briefs on each subject, and copies of the presentations MedPAC staff made to commissioners, here on MedPAC’s web site.

2015-12-14T15:53:19+00:00December 14th, 2015|Medicare|Comments Off on MedPAC Meets, Discusses Payment Issues

MedPAC Looks at Various Issues at September Public Meeting

The independent federal agency that advises Congress on Medicare payment issues held its monthly public meeting in Washington, D.C.
medpacDuring the two days of meetings, the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) discussed its work on six specific issues:

  • developing a unified payment system for post-acute care
  • a preliminary analysis of Medicare Advantage encounter data for Part B services
  • factors affecting variation in Medicare Advantage plan star ratings
  • Medicare drug spending
  • emergency department services provided at stand-alone facilities
  • payments from drug and device manufacturers to physicians and teaching hospitals

Each discussion was accompanied by an issue brief and a presentation; find those documents here.

2015-09-16T06:00:54+00:00September 16th, 2015|Medicare|Comments Off on MedPAC Looks at Various Issues at September Public Meeting

MedPAC Calls for End of “Two-Midnight Rule”

The independent agency that advises Congress on Medicare payment issues has recommended that Medicare eliminate its controversial two-midnight rule.
At its recent meeting in Washington, D.C., the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) also recommended that Medicare focus RAC (Recovery Audit Contractor) audits on hospitals with the highest numbers of short inpatient stays, shorten the look-back period for audits, modify the three-day rule for skilled nursing facility coverage, and require hospitals to inform patients when their stay has been classified as observation status rather than inpatient status.
Learn more about MedPAC’s recommendation in this Fierce Healthcare news report and go here to see the MedPAC presentation of the recommendations the agency’s board approved.

2015-04-16T06:00:40+00:00April 16th, 2015|Medicare|Comments Off on MedPAC Calls for End of “Two-Midnight Rule”

MedPAC Looks at Short-Stay Issues

The agency that advises Congress on Medicare payment issues is preparing to suggest changes in how Medicare approaches paying for short hospital stays.
At last week’s meeting of the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC), commissioners received a staff presentation on issues surrounding Medicare payments for short hospital stays and discussed possible recommendations for changes in how Medicare pays for those short hospital stays.
Among the possibilities discussed at the recent MedPAC meeting are revising how Medicare’s recovery audit contractors program (RAC audits) looks at short hospital stays; revising the three-day-stay requirement for Medicare to cover post-discharge skilled nursing care; penalizing hospitals found to have unusually large numbers of short stays; and shortening the time-frame during which individual cases are subject to RAC audits.
See the presentation made to MedPAC members here.  Also, see this CQ HealthBeat report presented by the Commonwealth Fund on the MedPAC meeting at which this issue was discussed.

2015-03-11T06:00:18+00:00March 11th, 2015|Uncategorized|Comments Off on MedPAC Looks at Short-Stay Issues
Go to Top