Medical Groups Slam Trump Medicaid Rule
More than 4,200 organizations or individuals have commented on the proposed Medicaid rule. Many warn of hospital or nursing home closures and of the impacts of diminished Medicaid funding, including possible reductions in enrollment or services and an exodus of medical professionals willing to participate in it.
By one estimate, the rule could reduce Medicaid spending by 6% to 8%, or
That analysis, prepared by
"It's a killer," said
Nursing home officials also say they fear closures if the rule is implemented.
The Trump administration said the rule would increase transparency and prevent abuses that enable states to draw down more federal money than they're entitled to.
The administration didn't specify examples, but government and tax watchdog groups have revealed that some states, such as
For example, federal auditors in 2014 found that
Opponents of the rule point out that there already exists oversight by both the
Under Trump, the
The comment period on the rule ended earlier this month, though lobbying continues behind the scenes. The administration could issue a final rule any time, though typically the process takes months.
Time to Digest
The proposed rule, released in November, is very complicated; state governments, think tanks and health-related organizations needed weeks to study its potential effects.
Known as the Medicaid Fiscal Accountability Rule, it would make numerous changes in the way states can raise money and draw down federal dollars to help pay for the Medicaid health services provided to low-income residents.
Medicaid, serving more than 71 million adults and children, is jointly financed by the states and the federal government. The state share varies from 22% to 50%, depending in part on per capita income.
In addition to reimbursing medical providers for the direct services they provide enrollees, Medicaid also makes supplemental payments to states to further bolster the aims of the program to provide health care for low-income residents.
For example, it sends more money to hospitals with a high portion of Medicaid or uninsured patients. Some states use the extra money to raise rates to some medical providers, such as those in rural areas, to ensure services are available.
Those supplemental payments accounted for a little more than half of overall Medicaid spending in 2018, or nearly
The 119-page proposed rule has several aspects: It would restrict the types of taxes and local government payments that states can use to draw down federal Medicaid dollars and would place new barriers on supplemental payments.
The rule would limit the amount of federal Medicaid money states can receive for required transfers of money for local government and for public and state teaching hospitals; for taxes they collect from health providers; and for in-kind services provided to Medicaid enrollees, such as those administered at school health clinics.
The rule also would reduce the amount of supplemental payments available to providers and add extensive review and reporting requirements.
Many critics have pointed out that the rule itself acknowledges that its effects are unclear. It says, for example, "The fiscal impact on the Medicaid program from the implementation of the policies in the proposed rule is unknown."
In the rule, CMS said it would "strengthen overall fiscal integrity of the Medicaid program."
CMS did not answer Stateline questions about the rule.
The rule, he said, would put an end to those practices while adding needed transparency.
"It's all corrupt, and it's perverse," said Blase, who now heads his own
Miller dismissed the complaints of governors and others. "Everybody always wants someone else to be financers of what they do," he said. "It's been going on for years."
Critics say CMS has failed to provide evidence of the fraud it wants to root out, and that in any case, a more targeted approach could have addressed those concerns.
'Unknown Is Terrifying'
Critics also point out that the rule is so vaguely written that states wouldn't know how to comply with it.
"That unknown is terrifying for folks, but it also raises serious constitutional questions," said
Salo noted that opposition to the rule is bipartisan, a point underlined by the fact that the bipartisan
Public comments opposing the proposed rule have come from doctors, nurses, hospitals, nursing homes, caretakers, emergency medical services and health advocacy organizations. Residents of skilled nursing facilities have expressed concerns that the rule will result in higher fees.
One of the rule's provisions would jeopardize an exemption that many small skilled nursing facilities receive; it enables them to pay little or none of the taxes imposed on larger facilities and other providers of medical care.
The elimination of that exemption could result in the loss of nearly
"I do not see states able to backfill for this sort of fiscal hit," said
Cheek said he expects closures if the rule goes through.
"The industry is already struggling to break even," he said. If the rule is implemented, "there will be locations that will close, especially in rural areas." The result, he said, will be a shortage of spots in facilities and patients having to live farther from their homes.
"The amount of money that we'll lose is too much to say, 'We'll just bear down and get through it with only small reductions,'" he said. "Programs would have to be downscaled, like women's maternity and neonatal services and trauma networks.
"Everyone will be affected by the losses."
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