Feds say hospitals that redistribute medicaid money violate law
The Biden administration wants to crack down on private arrangements among some hospitals to reimburse themselves for taxes that help fund coverage for low-income people. It contends the practice violates federal law.
Federal regulators say these arrangements "appear designed to" redirect Medicaid dollars away from facilities that treat the poorest patients to those that "provide fewer, or even no, Medicaid-covered services," according to a proposed enforcement plan released
The practice is typically orchestrated by the lobbying groups that represent hospitals in state capitals — and is often kept secret. Not even federal regulators know how widespread it is, although programs operate in at least a few states, including
"It does seem like these associations are finding a way to distribute the money in a really weird way," said
Previous efforts to block these payback arrangements have gone nowhere in the face of opposition from the powerful health care industry and state health officials who fear that clamping down could result in less money for Medicaid, the joint state-federal health insurance program for low-income people. Several Medicaid experts predicted the latest proposal could meet the same fate, or face immediate court challenges if adopted.
The federal government's sweeping and contentious proposal would require states to police hospitals, nursing homes, and other health care providers to ensure they made no private agreements to redistribute Medicaid dollars.
Public and private hospitals argue CMS has no jurisdiction to regulate private transactions and has overstepped its legal authority. Together with state health officials from around the country, they warn the move could strip billions of federal dollars from Medicaid and threaten safety-net coverage for 94 million low-income people.
The federal government's proposal is part of a broader Medicaid financing package, and it resurrects a long-standing effort by administrations of both parties over the years to rein in Medicaid spending — which ballooned to
In this case, regulators are targeting what are known as provider taxes, which states are increasingly imposing on hospitals, nursing homes, and other health care providers to help states pay for their share of the Medicaid program. The more provider taxes states levy, the more money they can also get in federal funding.
These taxes are a critical source of revenue that all states except
In
For instance, Cedars-Sinai in
Meanwhile, faith-based
Federal law sets stringent rules for provider taxes: They must be broad-based and apply to all providers within a certain category, like hospitals; providers within a state must be taxed at the same rate; and taxes can't be returned directly or indirectly to providers as part of a "hold harmless" agreement.
It's that last clause that has spurred the feds to act.
Regulators say some health care providers, to gain the needed support within their ranks for the tax, are moving the tax money — and the federal revenue it draws to states — among themselves.
"We believe providers with relatively higher Medicaid volume agree to redistribute some of their Medicaid payments to ensure broad support for the tax program," they wrote in their proposal.
These agreements "undermine the fiscal integrity" of the Medicaid program, they wrote.
It's unclear how widespread such agreements are because hospitals don't make them public. CMS said it has identified "instances" of Medicaid redistribution payments, but spokesperson
"
In 2002,
The federal government's plan would require states to get health care providers to attest that they don't participate in any arrangement that violates federal law. State officials described the proposal as an impractical administrative burden that could dissuade hospitals, nursing homes, and other providers from participating in Medicaid altogether. "Imposing additional requirements on providers that participate in Medicaid managed care networks would only serve to further dissuade network participation, which will have a negative impact on member access to care,"
In June, a federal judge handed
State health officials and hospital leaders are pointing to the
Federal regulators have not said if or when they will implement their plan. The last time the agency issued a sweeping Medicaid financing proposal, it withdrew it almost a year later.
"Medicaid is a huge component of state spending and keeps getting bigger," McClellan said. "So, sudden CMS changes or clamping down is going to be disruptive for state coverage."
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