The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office released a report estimating that the Senate bill would add $329 billion to deficits in 2013 and $3.9 trillion to deficits over the next 10 years, relative to current law. The CBO analysis of the bill shows fiscal 2013 revenues would be $280 billion lower and spending $50 billion higher, resulting in a $330 billion deficit increase, for a total deficit of around $971 billion in 2013. The bill would apply another temporary SGR fix and block the scheduled 27% payment cuts to Medicare providers, and keep rates frozen at current levels for one year. A companion CBO report (PDF) entitled Detail on Estimated Budgetary Effects of Title VI (Medicare and Other Health Extensions) of H.R. 8, the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012, As passed by the Senate on January 1, 2013 gives the details of the impact to Medicare. Among the provisions affecting healthcare (hat tip to Matthew Taber) are:
- elimination of funding for Medicare Improvement Fund
- rebasing of State DSH allotments
- repeal of the CLASS program (part of the ACA)
- creates commission on Long Term Care
- ambulance add-on services
- extension of payments for low-volumne hospitals
- extension of MDH program
- extension Medicare Advantage special needs programs
- extension of medicare reasonable cost contracts
- extension of qualifying individual program
- extension of transitional medical assistance program
- extension of S-CHIP Express Lane
- extension of family-to family health information center
- extension of indian diabetes program
- coding adjustment for MS-DRGs
- revisions to Medicare ESRD bundled payments
- treatment of multiple service payment policies for therapy services
- payment for certain radiology services
- adjustment of equipment utilization rate for radiology
- elimination of overpayment for diabetic supplies
- removes obstacles to collection of overpayments
- improves medicare advantage coding intensity adjustment
The legislation cuts $4.9 billion by changing the bundled payment given for end-stage renal disease services. An additional $300 million will come from cutting payment rates by 10 percent for non-emergency ambulance services used by patients with end-stage renal disease. There is also $1.8 billion projected to be saved by reducing reimbursement for multiple therapy procedures when performed on the same day.
The bill is a mixed bag in that it would require that hospitals pick up nearly half of the approximately $30 billion cost of stopping the 27% payment cut. The legislation will reduce hospital payments in two ways: number one, it will cut $10.5 billion from projected Medicare hospital payments over 10 years for inpatient or overnight care; number two, it will reduce Medicaid disproportionate share payments to hospitals by an additional $4.2 billion over the next decade.
Statements from stakeholders:
American Hospital Association
Federation of American Hospitals
National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems
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