Perhaps the most broadly-supported reform is the adoption of site neutral payments in Medicare. Medicare currently pays higher rates for procedures performed in hospital outpatient departments than for the same procedures performed in a physician’s office. As we’ve explained. The payment differentials are sometimes quite large – such as an average of 125 percent more for basic evaluations – and can drive hospital consolidation.
Members of both parties have endorsed site neutrality for some or all Medicare services, including as part of President Obama’s final budget, most of President Trump’s budgets, the bipartisan House-passed Lower Costs, More Transparency Act, Senator Kennedy's (R-LA) Same Care, Lower Cost Act, and a bipartisan site-neutral framework from Senators Cassidy (R-LA) and Hassan (D-NH). The policy – which is also supported by experts on the left, right, and center – could save over $150 through 2034. We’ve estimated it could also reduce premiums and cost-sharing by tens of billions more.
Numerous other policies with broad support could lower Medicare costs and reduce waste without cutting benefits. For example, Presidents Trump, Obama, and Bush have all supported reducing payments to post-acute care facilities, reforming Medicare payments for Graduate Medical Education (payments to hospitals and new doctors for their residency programs), restricting or ending reimbursements for “bad debts” (uncollected cost sharing), and modifying hospice payments. Presidents Trump, Obama, and Biden have all supported extending the Medicare ”sequester,” which reduces provider payments by 2 percent, and changing Medicare Part D cost-sharing rules to encourage the use of generic drugs. Together, these policies could save up to $300 billion through 2034.
Lawmakers could also consider reducing reimbursements for physician-administered drugs to hospitals benefiting from the 340B drug discount program – as currently those hospitals are able to pocket most of the drug savings. This change could save up to $75 billion over a decade.
And most significantly from a savings perspective, lawmakers could consider reducing Medicare Advantage (MA) overpayments, which we recently estimated could total $1.2 trillion over the next ten years – about 14 percent of total MA spending. These overpayments are driven mainly by the fact that insurers make their enrollees appear sicker (while simultaneously selecting a healthier population) to take advantage of “risk adjustment” payments, a phenomenon that has been recognized by experts on the left and right.
In the Senate, the bipartisan Cassidy-Merkley NO UPCODE Act would limit the ability of MA plans to inflate their enrollees’ risk scores. And although President Trump’s prior budgets had not proposed any Medicare Advantage reforms, Budget Director Russ Vought proposed well over $100 billion of MA savings in late 2022. More recently, the Trump Administration announced an effort to beef up MA plan audits to recover more overpayments, building on efforts under the Biden Administration. CMS Director Oz has also discussed the importance of addressing upcoding.
With a projected cost of $13 trillion over the decade, lawmakers should be keen to adopt policies with broad support among experts, which will reduce waste and excessive payments in Medicare. While these savings would ideally be used to reduce the deficit, they could also lessen the impact of OBBBA on the debt. |
No comments:
Post a Comment