Modern Healthcare

Rural hospitals need a strong safety net, new approaches to care delivery, payment

- By Alan Morgan

Since January 2010, 83 rural hospitals have closed and two more are likely soon. Another 673 additional facilities are vulnerable, representi­ng more than one-third of rural hospitals. Now, more than ever, we need new delivery models and new payment methodolog­ies for rural providers.

It is very important that we approach this as a two-step process to maintain access to care for rural America. First, we must stabilize the current rural healthcare safety net. And second, we must develop, test and implement new delivery and payment models.

Policymake­rs and rural advocates alike would love to identify the silver bullet, some magical new rural payment model that both secures the current safety net while improving quality and reducing costs for rural hospitals of all shapes and sizes. But alas, flexibilit­y is key for rural communitie­s, and a one-size-fits-all approach to rural policy is destined to fail.

However, three key policy approaches have emerged. When taken together, these approaches have the best potential for securing a lasting future for rural health access:

Policy leaders need to stop the many cuts in Medicare that rural hospitals have endured for years.

We need to create an escape route for struggling rural hospitals by allowing them to provide care that makes sense in their communitie­s and receive fair reimbursem­ent for emergency room visits and primary care.

We need to provide rural hospitals with new funding methodolog­y options so they can provide quality primary care to their patients.

One promising new payment proposal attracting significan­t national attention is the concept of “global budgeting” for rural hospitals. Outlined by former CMS Innovation Center official Karen Murphy and others in the March 27 issue of JAMA, this new payment concept, known as global budget payment, would seek to empower rural hospitals and their clinicians to innovate and provide the care their communitie­s specifical­ly need.

Simply stated, this new proposal would provide a steady, known revenue stream in exchange for developing a transforma­tional plan for care coordinati­on and a comprehens­ive community needs assessment. Starting in 2019, the Pennsylvan­ia Rural Health Model will test this concept of global budgeting designed to include Medicare, Medicaid and commercial payers. Given the complexiti­es of these programs and rural healthcare in general, the questions are many and so are the potential pitfalls.

Since 2014, all Maryland hospitals have participat­ed under a global budgeting payment methodolog­y. However, it is important to note that Maryland already had a rate-setting mechanism in place, so there was a blueprint to fol- low in implementi­ng global budgeting. For Pennsylvan­ia and other states that do not require rate-setting, the concept of global budgeting creates significan­t operationa­l challenges.

Specifical­ly, how will the data-collection needs be addressed to construct an accurate global budget for the various rural facilities? It is also important to note that Pennsylvan­ia is pursuing a voluntary approach to this payment model.

However, despite many concerns and unknowns, the National Rural Health Associatio­n views this new payment methodolog­y as very promising, and there is growing interest among policy leaders in Washington, D.C. A May 24 Senate Finance Committee hearing on rural hospital challenges and opportunit­ies covered this new payment model, as well as other options to ensure continued access to care in rural America.

The hearing to explore these new options, as Senate Rural Health Caucus Co-Chair Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) said, was “long overdue.”

For rural hospital leaders, flexibilit­y in delivery model structure and payment is paramount. The global budgeting approach provides assurances that participat­ing rural hospitals won’t “save themselves out of business” when implementi­ng population health strategies. In addition, the approach allows rural hospitals to take on a larger role as a connector in the community.

Bottom line, this discussion is about the economic vitality and long-term sustainabi­lity of rural communitie­s. As such, these new payment demonstrat­ions, combined with new delivery model demonstrat­ions, represent a prudent path forward and deserve further exploratio­n.

 ??  ?? Alan Morgan is CEO of the National Rural Health Associatio­n.
Alan Morgan is CEO of the National Rural Health Associatio­n.

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