SNAP Asks PA Senators for COVID-19 Help

Pennsylvania’s safety-net hospitals need help with the challenges posed by the COVID-19 public health emergency, SNAP wrote yesterday in a letter to Pennsylvania senators Pat Toomey and Bob Casey.

Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania logoIn its letter, SNAP asked the senators to advocate:

  • An additional $100 billion for hospitals.
  • Forgiveness for money provided to hospitals through the federal CARES Act’s Accelerated and Advance Payment Program.
  • An increase in the federal Medicaid matching rate (FMAP).
  • An increase in states’ Medicaid disproportionate share (Medicaid DSH) allotments and a delay in the scheduled implementation of Medicaid DSH allotment cuts to the states.
  • Action to prevent implementation of the Medicaid fiscal accountability regulation.
  • A moratorium on changes in hospital eligibility for the 340B prescription drug discount program, Medicare indirect medical education program, Medicare disproportionate share (Medicare DSH) program, and other programs.

See SNAP’s letter here.

SNAP Warns State About Use of COVID-19 Survey Data

Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania logoOn Thursday SNAP wrote to Pennsylvania Department of Human Services Secretary Teresa Miller to point out challenges that arise in the potential use and interpretation of the data hospitals have reported to DHS in that agency’s survey of hospitals’ financial condition as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.  In the letter, SNAP cautioned against possibly inappropriate interpretations of some of this data and offered to work with DHS officials to address these concerns. 

See SNAP’s letter here.

2020-06-12T16:33:21+00:00June 12th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19, Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania|Comments Off on SNAP Warns State About Use of COVID-19 Survey Data

COVID-19 Update: June 11, 2020

Coronavirus update for Thursday, June 11 as of 4:00 p.m.

Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania logoSNAP Advocacy

SNAP wrote to Department of Human Services Secretary Teresa Miller to point out challenges that arise in the potential use and interpretation of data hospitals have reported in DHS’s survey of hospitals’ financial condition as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.  SNAP cautioned against possibly erroneous interpretations of some of this data and offered to work with DHS officials to address these concerns.  See SNAP’s letter here.

Department of Human Services

DHS has published a report on its most recent stakeholder meeting.  Two passages in that report are of particular interest and relevance:

CARES Funding Update

Work continues to prepare for distribution of funds for providers from the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act. At this point, we are on pace to begin distributing one-time gross adjustment funds to intellectual disability and autism service providers beginning next week through July 1. Payments to nursing facilities and other long-term care facilities like personal care homes will begin in early July.

It is important to note that Act 24 of 2020 requires these funds to be expended by November 30, 2020 or returned to the commonwealth. Additionally, these funds must be used for COVID-19 related expenses. Providers will need to keep documentation to prove that these funds were used for their response to the COVID-19 pandemic in case of an audit. Further information about reporting requirements for these funds will be sent to providers in the coming weeks.

Regional Response Health Collaborative (RRHCP)

As we mentioned last week, Act 24 of 2020 establishes a Regional Response Health Collaborative (RRHCP), which essentially formalizes the existing Education Support and Clinical Coaching Program DHS established in partnership with the Jewish Healthcare Foundation and seven health systems to provide support to personal care homes, assisted living residences, and nursing facilities as they protect residents and staff from COVID-19.

The new RRHCP will be very similar but will operate under grant agreements, not a voluntary basis. The General Assembly allocated $175 million to be awarded among selected grantees for that purpose. In addition to this, funding from the CDC will also be available to the collaboratives to support testing in long-term care facilities to include asymptomatic staff and residents in facilities to bolster public health surveillance. Specifically, the collaborative will provide operations, management, and administrative support to protect residents in facilities from COVID-19. The collaboratives will promote health and stabilize the economy of the region by directly supporting COVID-19 readiness and response in facilities and improve the quality of care related to infection prevention and other priority health care conditions common to facilities. The network will also help long-term care facilities implement best practices in infection control, implement contact tracing programs in facilities, support clinical care through on-site and telemedicine services, provide remote monitoring and consultation with physicians, and enhance testing capability at facilities. Additionally, the collaboratives will provide alternate care arrangements for patients no longer requiring acute care but who are not ready to return to long-term care facilities.

We are close to issuing a Request for Applications to determine which health systems will be part of this partnership. This solicitation is available through eMarketplace, and applications are due by June 25, 2020.

Find the entire DHS meeting summary here.

Department of Health – by the numbers

  • Today’s new COVID-19 case and death counts are comparable to what they have been in recent days.
  • More than 19,000 residents and employees of long-term-care facilities have contracted COVID-19.
  • And residents of long-term-care facilities account for 69 percent of the 6113 COVID-19 deaths in Pennsylvania to date.
  • 950 Pennsylvanians are currently hospitalized for COVID-19 and 208 of them are on ventilators.
  • 40 percent of state hospitals’ acute-care beds, 39 percent of their ICU beds, 57 percent of their pediatric beds, and 30 percent of their pediatric ICU beds are currently unoccupied.

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

CMS issued a news release explaining that nursing homes may not seize their residents’ economic impact payments (stimulus checks) authorized under the federal CARES Act.  This practice is prohibited and nursing homes that seize these payments from residents could be subject to federal enforcement actions, including potential termination from participation in Medicare and Medicaid.

Resources to Consult

Pennsylvania Department of Human Services

Main COVID-19 Page

COVID-19 Provider Resources

Press Releases

Pennsylvania Department of Health

Main COVID-19 Page

PA Health Alert Network

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

(To receive this daily update directly, sign up for our mailing list at   info@pasafetynet.org.)

2020-06-12T06:00:30+00:00June 12th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19, Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: June 11, 2020

COVID-19 Update: June 4, 2020

Coronavirus update for Thursday, June 4 as of 2:30 p.m.

Pennsylvania Update

SNAP Advocacy

Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania logoToday SNAP wrote to Pennsylvania senators Robert Casey and Pat Toomey to ask them to pursue legislation with five major COVID-19-related policy initiatives that Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals need:

  1. A 14-point increase in the federal medical assistance percentage (FMAP).
  2. An additional $100 billion for hospitals.
  3. Another delay in implementation of Affordable Care Act-mandated cuts in Medicaid disproportionate share (Medicaid DSH) allotments.
  4. Prevention of implementation of the Medicare fiscal accountability regulation (MFAR).
  5. Reduced interest rates and a longer payback period for Medicare payments advanced to hospitals through the CARES Act’s Accelerated and Advance Payment Program.

See SNAP’s letter here.

Governor Wolf

Governor Wolf announced that the Office of State Fire Commissioner will be working to enact recent legislation to provide $50 million in direct financial relief to fire and emergency medical service (EMS) companies hurt by the ongoing COVID-19 outbreak.  $6 million of this money is targeted for EMS companies.

Governor Wolf and Secretary of Health Levine signed amended yellow phase orders to include 10 counties (including Bucks, Chester, Delaware, Montgomery, and Philadelphia counties) moving to the yellow phase at 12:01 a.m. tomorrow, June 5 and signed amended green phase orders to include 16 counties moving to the green phase at 12:01 a.m. tomorrow.  With these orders, there are no counties in the red phase. In total, on June 5, there will be 34 counties in the green phase and 33 in the yellow phase.  See the announcement here.

Department of Health – by the numbers

  • Yesterday’s new case and death totals are very similar to those of the previous day.
  • The number of health care workers who have contracted COVID-19 now exceeds 5600.
  • 1174 Pennsylvanians are currently hospitalized with COVID-19 and 257 of them are on ventilators.
  • 45 percent of acute-care beds, 38 percent of ICU beds, and 24 percent of pediatric ICU beds are currently unoccupied, as are 53 percent of hospital isolation rooms.

Department of Human Services/Office of Long-Term Living

Department of Aging

  • The Department of Aging has published guidance for the reopening and operation of adult daily living centers during the COVID-19 crisis in counties that have transitioned to the green phase.
  • The department has created an older adult daily living center reopening checklist for facilities reopening in green phase areas.
  • The department also has created a staff and participant COVID-19 wellness check screening tool for older adult daily living centers that are reopening.
  • The department also clarified that OLTL is requiring LIFE Centers to follow adult daily living center guidance for reopening.

Federal Update

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Department of Health and Human Services

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Food and Drug Administration

  • The FDA has introduced a new web-based resource, Testing Supply Substitution Strategies, that includes detailed information to help support labs performing authorized COVID-19 tests.
  • The FDA has updated the question-and-answer appendix in its guidance Conduct of Clinical Trials of Medical Products during COVID-19 Public Health Emergency with new information about compliance for electronic systems used to generate electronic signatures on clinical trial records.
  • The FDA has issued an alert to providers about the temporary absence of the “paralyzing agent” warning statement on the vial caps of the neuromuscular blocking agents vecuronium bromide and rocuronium bromide, both of which are often used for patients requiring medical ventilation.
  • The FDA has issued emergency use authorizations (EUAs) for five new commercial diagnostic tests for COVID-19. Find them here, here, here, here, and here.

Resources to Consult

Pennsylvania Department of Human Services

Main COVID-19 Page

COVID-19 Provider Resources

Press Releases

Pennsylvania Department of Health

Main COVID-19 Page

PA Health Alert Network

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

(To receive this daily update directly, sign up for our mailing list at  info@pasafetynet.org.)

 

2020-09-01T18:36:23+00:00June 5th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19, Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals, Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: June 4, 2020

COVID-19 Update: April 21, 2020

COVID-19 update for April 21 as of 5:00 p.m.

Pennsylvania Update

SNAP Advocacy

Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania logoToday SNAP wrote to members of Pennsylvania’s congressional delegation to ask them to support new COVID-19 and economic relief legislation that was expected to include $75 billion for hospitals.  See SNAP’s letter here.  The Senate has voted to approve the legislation and the house is expected to take it up on Thursday.  More detail about the bill’s contents is included in the federal update.

General Assembly

Today the House and Senate met to consider bills related to COVID-19 and to position legislation for FY 2020-21 budget negotiations.  Most notable of the votes today was final passage of S.B. 857, which would authorize health care providers to use telemedicine and require insurers to provide coverage and reimbursement for these services.  Over the last several months this bill stalled in the Senate due to controversial amendments added by House Republicans to restrict the use of telemedicine for certain abortion-related services.  Circumstances related to the COVID-19 pandemic have elevated the importance of ensuring access to telemedicine services, and today the Senate voted to concur in those controversial House amendments, along a party-line vote, and send the legislation to the governor.  The governor is expected to veto the bill.

Daily COVID-19 Briefing

  • The Department of Health new daily case counts are now the sum of two figures:  “confirmed” cases that have been determined by testing plus cases that have been ruled “probable” because of an individual’s symptoms and recent contact with someone who has a confirmed case of COVID-19.
  • Death counts are now being presented in a similar fashion:  “confirmed” deaths of patients who tested positive for COVID-19 plus “probable” cases for which a patient’s death certificate lists COVID-19 as a cause contributing to death but for which no COVID-19 test was administered.
  • As a result, the death figures are rising significantly.  They do not, however, reflect a sudden increase in daily deaths; instead, they are the result of after-the-fact reconciliation of case data.
  • More than half of all deaths have been residents of long-term-care facilities.
  • The state is working to get antibody testing materials but is first evaluating the array of test products, which appear to be of varying quality.
  • Antibody testing is now available through Quest.
  • Secretary Levine said she would like to do much more testing across the state, including through more mass testing sites and other sources.
  • Rite Aid, she noted, is now doing COVID-19 testing.
  • 40 percent of ICU beds across the state are currently unoccupied.
  • On the whole, the state’s hospitals are doing well.  Some are more challenged, especially in Philadelphia and the surrounding counties.
  • As a result of this challenge, an alternate site of care at Temple University has now opened to serve COVID-19 patients who are on the road to recovery but need to remain hospitalized.  This is being done to free hospital beds for more seriously ill COVID-19 patients.
  • Secretary Levine discussed the process of permitting hospitals to resume non-urgent procedures, explaining that this reflects a need to balance the desire to limit patients’ exposure to COVID-19 with the medical needs of patients who need procedures that are essential to their health.  Decisions about when and how to begin resuming non-urgent procedures will be made in consultation with the hospital industry.

Department of Human Services

DHS has published its answers to the questions asked by stakeholders and interested parties during its April 15 COVID-19 webinar.  Find that document here.

Two things are especially noteworthy in the information DHS provided.

First, DHS is still evaluating whether to take advantage of the CARES Act provision enabling states to temporarily expand Medicaid coverage to cover COVID-19 testing for uninsured individuals at 100 percent federal match.

Second, DHS is internally finalizing its request to CMS to alter its Medicaid State Plan to respond to the public health emergency.  The so-called Disaster SPA will include the following:

The Medicaid Disaster SPA is currently under internal review and will be submitted in the near future. When the Disaster SPA is submitted, DHS will be requesting the following:

  • Flexibilities related to eligibility determinations by CAOs;
  • Suspension of copayments for screening, diagnostic and treatment services related to COVID-19;
  • Coverage for certain cough and cold medications for adults;
  • Expansion of the outpatient drug day supply limit from 34 day/100 unit to 90 days;
  • Suspension of annual reassessments related to targeted support management for Individuals with an intellectual disability or autism;
  • Suspension of the prior authorization requirements for certain services, including:
    • Automated utilization reviews for emergency and urgent inpatient admissions;
    • First 28 of days of Home Health Services;
    • First 30 days of the following medical supplies:
      • Feeding supplies;
      • Respiratory supplies;
      • Urinary catheters;
      • Ostomy supplies; and,
      • Infusion supplies.
    • Appliances or equipment that costs more than $600; and,
    • Initial prescriptions of oxygen and related equipment.
  • A 90-day extension of the timeframe to complete cost reconciliation activities for Pennsylvania’s School-Based ACCESS Program (SBAP); and,
  • Waiver of Public notice requirements related to State Plan submission.

Department of Corrections

In our April 13 update we reported that Pennsylvania Correctional Industries, a business operated by Pennsylvania’s Corrections Department, was taking orders from non-profit organizations for masks and hand sanitizer.  Today the department announced that it is no longer fulfilling such orders at this time.

Federal Update

Congress and Administration Agree on Next Aid Package

Congressional leaders and the Trump administration have agreed to provide $75 billion for hospitals as part of a $484 billion COVID-19 and economic relief package.  This $75 billion would be addition to the money from the CARES Act and would have the same parameters as the CARES Act money.

The bill also includes $25 billion to research, develop, validate, manufacture, purchase, administer, and expand capacity for COVID-19 tests.  Among others, this $25 billion would be distributed as follows:

  • $11 billion for states, localities, and territories to develop, purchase, administer, process, and analyze COVID-19 tests, increase laboratory capacity, trace contacts, and support employee testing.
  • $1 billion to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for surveillance, epidemiology, lab capacity expansion, contact tracing, public health data surveillance, and the modernization of analytics infrastructure.
  • $1.8 billion to the National Institutes of health to develop, validate, improve, and implement testing and associated technologies, accelerate research and development of point-of-care testing, and partnerships with other entities.
  • $1 billion for the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) for advanced research, development, manufacture, production, and purchase of diagnostic, serologic, and other COVID-19 tests and supplies.
  • $825 million for Community Health Centers and rural health clinics.
  • Up to $1 billion to pay for testing for the uninsured.

Other major components of the bill include $310 billion to replenish the Paycheck Protection Program and $60 billion for the Small Business Administration’s disaster relief fund.

The Senate has already passed the bill and the House will vote on it on Thursday.

Department of Health and Human Services

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Food and Drug Administration

Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care

In the wake of CMS’s announcement earlier this month that ambulatory surgery centers would temporarily be permitted to operate as hospitals to increase the capacity of the health care system during the COVID-19 emergency, the Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health has posted resources for use in facilitating those temporary transitions.

Resources to Consult

Pennsylvania Department of Human Services

Main COVID-19 Page

COVID-19 Provider Resources

Press Releases

Pennsylvania Department of Health

Main COVID-19 Page

PA Health Alert Network

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

(To receive this daily update directly, sign up for our mailing list at info@pasafetynet.org.)

2020-04-22T08:23:40+00:00April 22nd, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19, Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: April 21, 2020

SNAP Asks HHS for More Coronavirus Grants

Private safety-net hospitals should be among high-volume Medicaid providers that receive priority consideration in the distribution of additional grants from the CARES Act, SNAP has written in a letter to Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Seema Verma.

Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania logoWith CMS already conceding that high-volume Medicaid providers may be shortchanged in the initial distribution of funds from the $100 billion designated for hospitals and health care providers in the CARES Act, SNAP asked Ms. Verma to “…acknowledge the special needs of these hospitals and the roles they play in their communities by ensuring that they will receive much-needed assistance in the second round of grants as well.”

See SNAP’s letter here.

2020-04-12T06:00:57+00:00April 12th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19, Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals, Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania|Comments Off on SNAP Asks HHS for More Coronavirus Grants

SNAP to PA Delegation: Help Us Fight Coronavirus

Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals need help fighting COVID-19, the Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania declared in a letter to members of the state’s congressional delegation.

Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania logoIn addition to the resources sought by hospitals everywhere – equipment, supplies, funding for expanded capacity to accommodate patients suffering from COVID-19 – SNAP emphasized three specific types of assistance in its letter to the delegation:

  • Help with cash flow.  As requested by the federal government and others, SNAP hospitals have limited or suspended elective surgery so they can focus their resources on COVID-19 patients.  This will create a cash-flow problem for them:  while they will be doing everything they can to care for their patients and will be expending considerable resources doing so, their revenue will decline.  These hospitals need up-front funding to replace the revenue they will lose and to help compensate them for the considerable costs they are incurring to prepare for the surge of patients they have been told to expect so they can keep the lights on, patient rooms and supply closets adequately stocked, and staff paid.
  • The elimination of Affordable Care Act-mandated reductions of Medicaid DSH allotments to the states.  Congress has already delayed these reductions on numerous occasions and late last year there was every indication that Congress would do so again.  At a time when hospitals are facing the gravest threat to the public health that they have seen in many years they should not be forced to waste valuable time planning the reductions in staffing and spending they would need to make if the cuts are implemented as scheduled on May 23.
  • No new programs or requirements in future COVID-19-related legislation that would increase hospitals’ regulatory burden.  In recent weeks Congress and the administration have appropriately reduced certain regulatory requirements on a temporary basis and it would be counterproductive to offset this much-needed regulatory relief by introducing new regulations and requirements.

See SNAP’s letter to the Pennsylvania congressional delegation here.

2020-03-23T13:00:25+00:00March 23rd, 2020|Coronavirus, Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals, Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania|Comments Off on SNAP to PA Delegation: Help Us Fight Coronavirus

Fitch: Medicaid Block Grants, MFAR Threaten States, Providers

Medicaid block grants and the proposed Medicaid fiscal accountability regulation (MFAR) pose new financial threats to providers and states, according to Fitch Ratings, the financial rating company.

MFAR poses the greater threat, Fitch believes, noting in a new analysis that it could

…reduce total Medicaid spending nationally by $37 billion and $44 billion annually…and by $23 billion to $30 billion for hospitals alone.  States, and to some extent providers, would respond to MFAR’s implementation with measures to mitigate the negative fiscal implications.

Bookshelf with law booksBlock grants, through what has been named the Healthy Adult Opportunity program, also pose a threat, with Fitch explaining that

Capping federal Medicaid contributions, even for a subset of beneficiaries, poses risks to state budgets and those entities reliant on state funding, including local governments and providers.  States would need to find revenue or cost savings, either in Medicaid or elsewhere, to offset reduced federal contributions.

Because Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals care for more Medicaid patients than the typical hospital, both proposed policy changes have a potentially greater impact on them.

Last month SNAP conveyed its opposition to the proposed MFAR regulation in a formal comment letter to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services in response to the regulation’s publication late last year.  Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf has already rejected the idea of using block grants in the state’s Medicaid program.

Learn more about the potential impact of the proposed Medicaid fiscal accountability regulation and Medicaid block grants in the Fitch Ratings analysis “Fitch Rtgs: Medicaid Changes Will Affect States, NFP Healthcare Providers.”

2020-02-20T06:00:08+00:00February 20th, 2020|Federal Medicaid issues, Pennsylvania Medicaid, Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals, Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania|Comments Off on Fitch: Medicaid Block Grants, MFAR Threaten States, Providers

Verma Responds to MFAR Critics

CMS administrator Seema Verma addresses criticism of her agency’s proposed Medicaid fiscal accountability regulation in a new commentary on the CMS blog.

Critics of the so-called MFAR regulation have argued that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ proposed regulation, if adopted, will lead to a reduction of federal funding for state Medicaid programs, jeopardize access to care and the financial health of providers by leading to a reduction of supplemental payments to high-volume Medicaid providers, and possibly even force some states to raise taxes to compensate for the loss of federal funding.

In her commentary Verma rebuts these criticisms, maintaining that the proposed regulation seeks to ensure that states pay their fair share of their Medicaid partnership with the federal government, raise that share in a manner consistent with federal guidelines, and spend it in ways that fall within regulatory standards.  She also maintains that the regulation will foster greater transparency and accountability for the Medicaid program.

Verma notes that more than 4000 stakeholders submitted written comments in response to the proposed regulation.  SNAP was among those commenters, writing that MFAR would give too much authority to federal regulators; create new administrative burdens for hospitals and state governments; and inappropriately limit state financing of their share of Medicaid spending.

Learn more from the Verma CMS blog commentary “Medicaid Fiscal Integrity: Protecting Taxpayers and Patients” and from SNAP’s letter in response to the proposed regulation.

 

2020-02-14T06:00:39+00:00February 14th, 2020|Federal Medicaid issues, Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania|Comments Off on Verma Responds to MFAR Critics

Health Care Groups Rebel Against Proposed Federal Regulation, Program

The administration’s proposed Medicaid fiscal accountability regulation and its guidance encouraging states to implement Medicaid block grants have incurred widespread opposition among a variety of health care groups.

The Medicaid fiscal accountability regulation would, if adopted, impose new restrictions on how states raise their share of their Medicaid spending, potentially limiting state participation in Medicaid or necessitating tax increases to fill the funding gap if long-accepted financing tools are no longer available to them.

Bookshelf with law booksThe Medicaid block grant guidance offers states a blueprint for curtailing their Medicaid costs by imposing limits on that spending that they negotiate with the federal government.

Numerous health care groups have expressed reservations or direct opposition to one or both of the proposals.  Among them:

  • AARP
  • America’s Essential Hospitals
  • America’s Health Insurance Plans
  • American College of Emergency Physicians
  • American Health Care Association
  • American Hospital Association
  • American Medical Association
  • Association for Community Affiliated Plans
  • Association of American Medical Colleges
  • Coalition of Long-Term Acute-Care Hospitals
  • LeadingAge
  • National Alliance of Safety-Net Hospitals
  • National Association of State Budget Officers
  • National Association of Medicaid Directors
  • National Continuing Care Residents Association
  • National Governors Association
  • Private Essential Access Community Hospitals

Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania logoAmong the groups submitting formal comment letters to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services in response to the proposed Medicaid fiscal accountability regulation was the Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania.  See SNAP’s letter here.

Learn more about why these groups object to these two new policy developments in articles in Axios (“A little-noticed Medicaid proposal could have huge consequences”), Bloomberg Law (“Trump Plan to Tame State Medicaid Finance Schemes Sees Pushback”), Health Affairs (“Proposed Rules On Medicaid Financing Miss Mark And Threaten Access”), Healthcare Dive (“Payers, providers urge CMS to scrap rule targeting supplemental Medicaid payments”), Healthcare Finance News (“Providers, payers, others speak out against federal proposals for Medicaid funding”), McKnight’s Long-Term Care News (“Providers rally against proposed Medicaid supplemental payment rules that threaten ‘major financial burdens’”), McKnight’s Senior Living (“CMS proposal would be ‘major financial burden’ for CCRCs, residents, organizations say”),  and U.S. News & World Report (“Governors Warn Trump Rule Could Lead to Big Medicaid Cuts”)

2020-02-10T06:00:34+00:00February 10th, 2020|Federal Medicaid issues, Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania|Comments Off on Health Care Groups Rebel Against Proposed Federal Regulation, Program
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