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Maternity Payment Cut Takes Effect

The Medical Assistance cut in fee-for-service inpatient payments for the care of normal newborns took effect on June 1.
According to the Department of Public Welfare (DPW), the payment reduction brings Pennsylvania into line with what other states’ Medicaid programs pay for such care.  According to hospital industry representatives, Pennsylvania hospitals still lose money on Medicaid deliveries and now will lose more.
This policy will be especially damaging to Pennsylvania’s safety-net hospitals.  Although only one-third of the state’s acute-care hospitals, safety-net hospitals perform two-thirds of all Medicaid deliveries according to the March 2012 report “Pennsylvania’s Safety-Net Hospitals:  Vital Providers, Vital Employers” prepared by the Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania.
Read more about the state’s new policies, how it will affect hospitals, and how hospitals are responding to it in this Pittsburgh Post-Gazette articleHospital building.

2012-06-06T06:00:00+00:00June 6th, 2012|Pennsylvania Medicaid policy, Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania|Comments Off on Maternity Payment Cut Takes Effect

DPW Launches “Open Government” Web Site

The Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare (DPW) has launched a new “transparency portal” on its web site through which the public can obtain a broad array of DPW information and data.
The available information includes facility and program audits, Medical Assistance fee schedules and payments, and individual provider reimbursement data.
The reimbursement data is especially broad, offering detailed information about state Medical Assistance payments to individual providers.
Read a DPW news release about the new DPW web site feature here and visit the site itself through this linkFinancial paperwork.

2012-06-01T14:58:49+00:00June 1st, 2012|Pennsylvania Medicaid policy, Pennsylvania state budget issues|Comments Off on DPW Launches “Open Government” Web Site

HealthChoices Expands, ACCESS Plus Contracts

Harrisburg, PA capital buildingEffective July 1, the Pennsylvania Medical Assistance program’s HealthChoices mandatory managed care program will expand to seven new counties:  Bedford, Blair, Cambria, Franklin, Fulton, Huntingdon, and Somerset.  At the same time, the state’s ACCESS Plus Medicaid managed care program will cease operations in those same counties.
Further information can be found in a May 25 Department of Public Welfare (DPW) Medical Assistance Bulletin, which can be found here.

2012-05-31T06:00:15+00:00May 31st, 2012|Meetings and notices|Comments Off on HealthChoices Expands, ACCESS Plus Contracts

Medical Assistance Expands Use of Telemedicine

Pennsylvania’s Medical Assistance program has unveiled plans to make greater use of telemedicine in the future.
According to a news release from the governor’s office, the program will expand the types of medical specialists who may engage in telemedicine, remove the requirement that referring physicians participate in telemedicine consultations, and establish specific technologies for use in such consultations.
Learn more about this Medical Assistance initiative by going herePennsylvania State Keystone and reading the governor’s news release.

2012-05-23T13:22:36+00:00May 23rd, 2012|Pennsylvania Medicaid policy|Comments Off on Medical Assistance Expands Use of Telemedicine

MAAC to Meet

The next meeting of Pennsylvania’s Medical Assistance Advisory Committee (MAAC) will be held on Thursday, May 24 in Harrisburg.  The MAAC advises the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare on Medicaid policy.  Its meetings are open to the public.Harrisburg, PA capital building

2012-05-17T06:00:41+00:00May 17th, 2012|Meetings and notices|Comments Off on MAAC to Meet

Newborn Pay Cut

Pennsylvania’s Medical Assistance program will no longer pay hospitals for care they provide to normal newborns delivered by patients who participate in the state’s fee-for-service program.
This policy change, which took effect on May 1, will have a greater impact on Pennsylvania’s safety-net hospitals than on other hospitals because safety-net hospitals are involved in far more Medicaid-covered deliveries than other hospitals – two-thirds of such births according to the recent SNAP report Pennsylvania’s Safety-Net Hospitals:  Vital Providers, Vital Employers, which you can find here.
The policy change governing how Medicaid will pay hospitals for the care they provide to normal newborns is described in greater detail in a May 4 Medical Assistance Bulletin, which you can read hereBookshelf with law books.

2012-05-07T06:00:56+00:00May 7th, 2012|Pennsylvania Medicaid laws and regulations, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy|Comments Off on Newborn Pay Cut
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