Home Health Providers Take Aim At CMS’ ‘Black Box’ Approach To Policymaking

Home Health Care News | By Joyce Famakinwa
 
Enough time has passed since the CY 2024 home health payment rule was finalized for providers to dive into its details, mull them over and respond. 
 
Though the rule is more favorable than the proposal the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) first introduced in June, home health providers are not pleased with the final outcome. 
 
CMS didn’t address – and in some cases furthered – the concerns that many providers and industry stakeholders raised in the months and weeks leading up to the rule’s finalization. 
The rule comes with a 0.8%, or $140 million, aggregate increase to home health payments. In June, CMS proposed a 2.2% aggregate decrease for 2024, which would have been an aggregate decrease of $375 million. 
 
Plus, the rule finalized a -2.890% adjustment, which is half of the cut originally proposed back in June. 
 
“My initial reaction was that where we landed was an improvement over what was proposed,” Choice Health at Home CEO David Jackson told Home Health Care News. “I believe home health provides substantial economic upside for the Medicare program and for the beneficiaries. I continue to disagree with the methodology, as far as how it’s viewed as budget neutral.” 
 
When the rule was first released, some providers felt that relief. But that quickly wore off.
 
“I quickly came to the stark realization that CMS still was continuing with deep cuts — albeit they were kicking them down the road — despite the prevalence of respected third-party data highlighting that cuts have made problems with access to care a reality, not just an assumption,” David Totaro, chief government affairs officer at Bayada Home Health Care, told HHCN. 
 
Similar to Totaro and Jackson, other providers have voiced pushback to what they believe is CMS doubling down on its intention to implement the permanent adjustment cuts in the coming years. 

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