Hospitals ask Congress to delay ACA Medicaid funding cuts — for the 14th time
It has become as familiar a sight in
It is unlikely the reductions will occur this year, if history is any indication. Since 2013,
Unless
Known as the
The cuts are part of a deal brokered with the hospital industry 14 years ago, as the fate of the ACA dangled in the balance. At the time, hospitals agreed to accept
Despite record-high hospital profits and record-low uninsured rates in recent years, the hospital industry again says this is not a good time for cuts, pointing to the covid-19 pandemic and the millions of people losing Medicaid coverage as a result of pandemic-era protections ending.
Current Medicaid funding covers only about 81% of hospitals' costs of caring for patients, said
Losing the Medicaid safety-net funding "would be devastating to hospitals," she said.
A bipartisan group of 231 members of the
The postponements show the political muscle of the hospital industry, strengthened by virtually every lawmaker's district having at least one hospital that provides care and jobs.
Hospitals have been among the biggest donors to members of
According to the watchdog group OpenSecrets, the
Critics say the hospital industry — which often increases prices, sues patients for lack of payment, and pays big-dollar salaries to top executives — should hold up its side of the deal it made with
"Too many hospitals have for years been trying to have it both ways, benefitting from the ACA while trying to escape responsibilities they have under the law," said
On
At the time, ACA reform efforts teetered as interest groups feuded and
The savings from the
President
Hospital lobbyists argue the industry has already absorbed cuts in Medicare funding under the ACA and that the Medicaid cuts should not be implemented because uninsured rates have not dropped as low as the 5% rate predicted before the law's passage.
Though the health law has been a "godsend," it also has not met its anticipated goal of universal coverage, said
Kahn, who was involved in the agreement with the Obama White House, said the ACA has fallen short of universal coverage largely because 10 states, including more populous ones like
As a result, hospitals in these states have provided more unpaid care than anticipated and need the additional Medicaid payments to cover costs, he said.
Kahn said the extra Medicaid payments also help offset shortfalls caused by Medicare and Medicaid underpaying hospitals.
The ACA called for the DSH program's cuts to be phased in, with less than
In fiscal year 2021, the most recent year for which data is available, DSH spending nationwide totaled
The program, intended for safety-net hospitals, has been the subject of controversy for decades.
One reason is that the money does not always go to safety-net hospitals.
A study published in Health Affairs last year found 57% of hospitals received the DSH payments in 2015. About 94% of these payments went to hospitals with either a high percentage of uninsured patients or Medicaid enrollees or higher-than-average uncompensated care.
But 6% of recipient hospitals did not meet these criteria, the study showed.
The researchers estimated that about a third of the payments went to hospitals not focused on caring for low-income populations.
While the safety-net program is intended to help hospitals treating large numbers of Medicaid and uninsured patients, the formula determining how much money states get is based on historical Medicaid spending totals before limits were put in place in 1992, she said.
As a result, states like
Chatterjee said hospitals will likely argue there is never a good time to accept the cuts. She noted some rural and urban hospitals have closed in recent years even as other hospitals have made record profits.
"It's always hard to take money away from hospitals because they hold such symbolic meaning, and legislators know that," she said.



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