Trump’s new law will limit payments to hospitals that treat patients with low incomes
Trump's new law will limit payments to hospitals that treat patients with low incomes
President
Medicaid, the joint state-federal health insurance program for those with a low income, reimburses doctors, hospitals and nursing facilities for treating enrollees. But in many cases, the program doesn't fully cover the cost of care, straining providers that serve a large share of Medicaid patients.
To help providers cover losses and continue to serve poorer populations, the federal government allows the 41 states, plus the
Ultimately, taxpayers cover the costs of these so-called state-directed payments — and those costs are growing. As of
That higher spending attracted the attention of conservatives on
Beginning in 2028, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act will cap the payments, forcing state Medicaid programs to reduce reimbursement rates by 10 percentage points each year until they reach either 100% or 110% of what Medicare pays. States that expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act would be capped at the lower rate.
The new law will reduce Medicaid spending by
Critics say the change could be disastrous for hospitals, many of them in rural areas, that see a large share of Medicaid patients.
"This is all on top of an already pretty strained financial situation for rural hospitals,"
Covering the cost of care
Supporters of the change say the extra payments inflate federal spending on the Medicaid program, giving hospitals "windfall profits."
"Not only do these programs sidestep the truly needy on Medicaid and favor special interests instead, but all this is financed by growing the federal debt, leading to inflation and higher interest rates for all Americans," the
Hospital leaders dispute that. Earlier this year, the
"Over time, commercial payers are paying less and less," Samuelson said. "Many hospitals in our state are at risk of closure."
Samuelson said that in rural areas, health care providers see fewer patients, which makes it hard to spread out the cost of care and make up for losses that come from serving underinsured, Medicaid and Medicare patients. One result is that rural hospitals are trimming services. A report published this year by Chartis, a health care consulting firm, found that between 2011 and 2023, nearly 300 rural hospitals across the country stopped offering obstetrics care, and 424 rural hospitals ceased chemotherapy services.
In
"We are closely managing our workforce expenses. We're going to be relying more heavily on philanthropy," Anderson said, adding that the hospital wouldn't lay off staff but would reduce the number of workers by not filling open positions.
He said his hospital has some cash reserves that should enable it to keep going, but that many other rural hospitals lack such a cushion.
"When we think about the cuts to Medicaid, it isn't simply about cutting services to the poor. It's threatening services to everyone, because in a rural community, we all get care in the same place," he said. "If we cut out the safety net that's sustaining these hospitals, everyone's health care is threatened."
Searching for answers
Three hours northeast of
Lutz said the hospital is not part of a broader health care group, and it relies on philanthropy and local taxes. Due to financial strains, it's in the process of selling off its home and hospice services to another health care facility. The cap on extra payments will be an additional barrier, she said.
Samuelson said
Rural hospitals in
Like
"A few years ago, we had several rural hospitals that were facing some imminent closure challenges, and so our enhanced supplemental payment based on the average commercial rate has been a lifeline," said
"What we're concerned about is that when those payments start to decrease, then we're going to be right back to where we were in 2022, with concerns about rural hospitals again."
Roberson said Medicaid, with the additional payments, had become "one of the best payers, if not the best payer, for our hospitals over the last two years," and helped a lot of hospitals stay out of the red.
He said the new rural health care fund is promising, but noted that
"We want to make sure we're working with the state to provide sustainable solutions, not one-time fixes," Roberson said. "The big wild card is the Rural Health Transformation fund and what the state chooses to do with that money."
This story was produced by Stateline and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.



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