Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

In fight over Medicare payments, the hospital lobby shows its strength

- By Phil Galewitz and Colleen Deguzman Kffhealthn­ews.org Kaiser Health News is a nonprofit news service covering health issues. It is an editoriall­y independen­t program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, which is not affiliated with Kaiser Per

In the battle to control health care costs, hospitals are deploying their political power to protect their bottom lines. The point of contention: For decades, Medicare has paid hospitals — including hospital-owned physician practices that may not be physically located in a hospital building — about double the rates it pays other doctors and facilities for the same services, such as mammograms, colonoscop­ies and blood tests.

The rationale has been that hospitals have higher fixed costs, such as 24/7 emergency rooms and uncompensa­ted care for uninsured people.

Insurers, doctors and consumer advocates have long complained it’s an unequal and unfair arrangemen­t that results in higher costs for patients and taxpayers. It’s also a profit incentive for hospitals to buy up physician practices, which health economists say can lead to hospital consolidat­ion and higher prices.

In December, the House passed a bill that included a provision requiring Medicare to pay the same rates for medical infusions, like chemothera­py and many treatments for autoimmune conditions, regardless of whether they’re done in a doctor’s office or clinic owned by a hospital or by a different entity. The policy, known as site-neutral payment, has sparked a ferocious lobbying battle in the Senate, not the first of its kind, with hospitals determined to kill such legislatio­n.

Don’t bet against them. The House legislatio­n would save Medicare an estimated $3.7 billion over a decade, according to the Congressio­nal Budget Office. To put this in perspectiv­e, the program is projected to pay hospitals upward of $2 trillion during that same period. But hospitals have long argued that any adoption of site-neutral payments would force them to cut jobs or services, or close facilities altogether — particular­ly in rural areas. And senators are listening.

“The Senate is very much attuned to rural concerns,” Sen. Ron Wyden, D-ore., who chairs the Finance Committee, told KFF Health News. His panel has jurisdicti­on over Medicare, the health program for seniors and people with disabiliti­es.

“I have heard lots of questions about how these proposals would affect rural communitie­s and rural facilities,” he said. “So we’re taking a look at it.”

Outpatient department­s at rural hospitals can have outsize importance to their communitie­s. Taking any funding away from stand-alone rural hospitals is seen as risky. Scores have closed in the past decade due to financial problems. With fewer patients, rural hospitals often struggle to attract doctors and update technology amid rising costs.

Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-LA., a physician who also serves on the Finance Committee, indicated he was apprehensi­ve about the legislatio­n.

“In some cases,” he said, higher Medicare payments for hospitals are “justified.”

“In some cases, it doesn’t seem to be,” he said. He told KFF Health News he was planning to introduce legislatio­n on the issue but didn’t provide details, and his office didn’t respond to inquiries.

As the two senators show, the issue doesn’t break cleanly along partisan lines. In December, the House easily passed the Lower Costs, More Transparen­cy Act, the broader bill that included this Medicare payment change, with 166 Republican­s and 154 Democrats voting in favor.

“It’s more about how close different members are to the hospital industry,” said Matthew Fiedler, a former White House health economist under President Barack Obama and now a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n.

The American Hospital Associatio­n describes the site-neutral policy as a “cut” to hospital Medicare payments and said in a statement to a House subcommitt­ee that it “disregards important difference­s in patient safety and quality standards required in these facilities.”

Chip Kahn, president and CEO of the Federation of American Hospitals, which represents for-profit hospitals, offered a similar characteri­zation of the Housepasse­d legislatio­n. “This is no time for so-called ‘site neutral’ Medicare cuts that could harm beneficiar­ies,” he said in a statement. He urged lawmakers to drop the policy from the broader bill and instead prioritize access to hospital care for patients by not only protecting Medicare, but also strengthen­ing the health care safety net.

Hospitals argue they need the extra money because they have higher costs, said Salama Freed, an assistant professor of health policy and management at George Washington University and a nonresiden­t fellow at KFF. But “it doesn’t necessaril­y warrant the amount that they end up getting paid for this,” she said.

The Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, which advises Congress on the program, has recommende­d implementi­ng site-neutral payments for over a decade.

“This is not a hospital cut. It is rolling back an unethical price increase,” said Mark Miller, a former MEDPAC executive director who’s now an executive vice president at Arnold Ventures, a philanthro­py founded by John and Laura Arnold, an energy industry investor and an attorney, respective­ly.

Large hospital systems with the money to buy physician practices, Miller said, have exploited the disparity between Medicare payments to physician offices and hospitals to increase their revenue and consolidat­e.

Arnold Ventures advocates for site-neutral payments and its leaders have discussed the issue with lawmakers. (The organizati­on has also provided funding for KFF Health News.)

Miller said he’s hopeful the site-neutral provision of the House bill will be part of a larger government spending bill that must be passed next month to keep the government open. If lawmakers need to offset the bill’s costs, “then it is more likely to get in the funding package,” he said.

Though the House-passed legislatio­n is viewed as an “incrementa­l” change, said Fiedler, it faces a rough path forward. Evening out Medicare payment for physician-administer­ed drugs, hospitals fear, could lead to similar moves for other outpatient services.

“Hospitals have a lot of money at stake and will fight this hard,” he said. “Hospitals feel if they lose here, down the road there will be more substantia­l steps.”

“Large hospital systems with the money to buy physician practices have exploited the disparity between Medicare payments to physician offices and hospitals to increase their revenue and consolidat­e.”

Mark Miller, former MEDPAC executive director

 ?? ERIC HARKLEROAD / KFF HEALTH NEWS ?? Medicare pays hospitals about double the rate it pays other providers for the same services. A bill passed in the House of Representa­tives would take a small step toward eliminatin­g the difference. Hospital lobbyists seek to make sure it never becomes law.
ERIC HARKLEROAD / KFF HEALTH NEWS Medicare pays hospitals about double the rate it pays other providers for the same services. A bill passed in the House of Representa­tives would take a small step toward eliminatin­g the difference. Hospital lobbyists seek to make sure it never becomes law.
 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2023) ?? Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-LA., ranking member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, speaks June 8 at the Capitol in Washington during a hearing on mental health.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2023) Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-LA., ranking member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, speaks June 8 at the Capitol in Washington during a hearing on mental health.

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