Practice Economics

New bill consolidates SGR fix, CHIP reauthorization


 

References

Bipartisan lawmakers have introduced a bill that would repeal the Medicare Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) formula, this time with language that would reauthorize the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) for 2 years.

Leaders on the House Energy and Commerce and House Ways and Means committees on March 24 announced H.R. 2, the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act. The proposal builds on H.R. 1470, the SGR Repeal and Medicare Provider Payment Modernization Act – reintroduced March 19 – by extending CHIP funding through fiscal 2017. Funding for the program expires in September. The Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act also includes 2-year reauthorization of the Community Health Centers program, the National Health Service Corps, and the Teaching Health Centers program, all of which would expire in 2015.

Rep. Fred Upton

Rep. Fred Upton

The changes would be paid for by income-related premium adjustments for Medicare parts B and D, Medigap reforms, an increase of levy authority on payments to Medicare providers with delinquent tax debt, adjustments to inpatient hospital payment rates, a delay of Medicaid Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) changes until 2018, and a 1% market basket update for post–acute care providers.

The payment proposals of the bill reflect a working framework released by committee members March 20. A vote on the SGR package is expected this week.

The bill culminates years of efforts by lawmakers and stakeholders and will strengthen Medicare over the long term, according to Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Fred Upton (R-Mich.).

“We can see the light at the end of the SGR tunnel – finally,” Rep. Upton said in a statement. “This responsible legislative package reflects years of bipartisan work, is a good deal for seniors, and a good deal for children, too. It’s time to put a stop once and for all to the repeated SGR crises and start to put Medicare on a stronger path forward for our seniors.”

Rep. Frank Pallone

Rep. Frank Pallone

The committee’s ranking member, Rep. Frank Pallone (D-N.J.) agreed.

“Finally, after a decade of trying, we have a bipartisan bill that will permanently repeal the flawed SGR and move Medicare to a health care system based on quality and efficiency, that is good for seniors and doctors alike,” Rep. Pallone said.

“As with any bipartisan effort, this legislation reflects give and take on both sides. However, we have come to a balanced compromise that will end uncertainty in the system, extend CHIP, fund Community Health Centers, and make permanent the Qualifying Individual (QI) program that helps low income seniors pay their Medicare premiums,” he added.

In addition to repealing the SGR, the final bill includes a 0.5% pay increase per year for the next 5 years; consolidates existing quality programs into a single value-based performance program; incentivizes physicians to use alternate payment models that focus on care coordination and preventive care; and pushes for more transparency of Medicare data for physicians, providers, and patients.

The latest bill comes a week before the current SGR patch expires on March 31. Without legislative action, physicians will see a 21% cut in Medicare pay.

agallegos@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

HHS report: Record number of patients covered under ACA
MDedge Dermatology
States expand Medicaid through unique approaches
MDedge Dermatology
Apple’s ResearchKit
MDedge Dermatology
Feds recover $3 billion in health fraud in 2014
MDedge Dermatology
SGR repeal bill reintroduced; payment mechanism not addressed
MDedge Dermatology
VIDEO: Expert offers tips on buying, using dermatoscopes
MDedge Dermatology
VIDEO: Negative online reviews don’t have to hurt your practice
MDedge Dermatology
FAQ: What’s in the House proposal to fix the SGR?
MDedge Dermatology
Value-based payment: Time to start getting ready
MDedge Dermatology
Uncompensated hospital care declines by $7 billion
MDedge Dermatology