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May 8,
2019
By Seema Verma, Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
Putting our Rethinking Rural Health Strategy into Action
Approximately 60 million
Americans or roughly 1 in 5 live in rural areas, with nearly every state
having a rural county. The Trump Administration recognizes the significant
obstacles faced by patients and providers in rural areas. Among the five
leading causes of death, rates are higher for rural communities, and for
several conditions the gap between urban and rural communities has widened.
Rural communities tend to have higher rates of poverty, higher rates of
uninsurance or underinsurance, greater transportation difficulties in getting
to a hospital or doctor’s office, and lack access to high-speed internet,
which limits access to information. Rural areas face workforce shortage
issues, where the patient-to- primary care physician ratio in rural areas is
only 39.8 physicians per 100,000 people, compared to 53.3 physicians per
100,000 in urban areas. Since 2010, over 100 rural hospitals have closed and
nearly 40% of rural hospitals currently running are operating with negative
margins. This limits the ability for providers to compete based on high value
care, and leads to fewer choices for beneficiaries in rural areas.
Those of you following the
work of CMS over the past couple of years know that the Trump Administration
has placed an unprecedented priority on improving the health of Americans
living in rural areas. We furthered this commitment by introducing the first
ever Rural Health Strategy as part of our Rethinking Rural Health Initiative
to focus on ways we can strengthen the rural healthcare system and avoid
unintended consequences of CMS policy and program implementation. Our Rural
Health Strategy focuses on applying a rural lens to the vision and work of
CMS, improving access to care through provider engagement and support,
advancing telehealth, empowering patients in rural areas about making
decisions on their healthcare and leveraging partnerships to improve rural
health. Our goal at CMS is to develop programs and policies that ensure rural
Americans have access to high quality care, support rural providers and not
disadvantage them, address the unique economics of providing healthcare in
rural America, and reduce unnecessary burdens in a stretched system to
advance our commitment to improving health outcomes for Americans living in
rural areas.
In the last year, we have
taken several steps to improve rural health by leveraging technology to
increase access for beneficiaries living in rural areas. Specifically, we
have made historic changes to expand access to telehealth and other virtual
services across the Medicare program. Medicare now pays for virtual check-ins
that allow a patient to check in with their clinician by phone or other
telecommunication system, and remote evaluations of recorded videos or images
that a patient submits to their clinician, to help them decide together
whether the patient needs to make a trip to be seen in-person. We also cover
stand-alone telephone consultations with clinicians at Rural Health Clinics
and Federally Qualified Health Centers, expanding access to care for patients
in rural areas. We also expanded access to the services that can be delivered
via telehealth, such as wellness visits that require additional time for
complex patients and care for patients experiencing a stroke or with End
Stage Renal Disease (ESRD). Last month, we announced that we are providing
more flexibility to Medicare Advantage plans to offer innovative telehealth
services as part of their basic benefit, expanding access to care for our
beneficiaries. And we have expanded access to telehealth as part of our
overhaul of the Medicare Shared Savings Program, in the Pathways to Success
final rule. In our model for Medicare Advantage plans, known as the Value
Based Insurance Design (VBID) model, we are testing how to account for
telehealth services in determining whether a plan’s network or access to
services is adequate.
As part of rethinking
rural health, we’ve taken great care to apply a rural lens to all our
programs and policies – for every policy we review, we consider the impact on
rural providers. While there are many factors that contribute to rural
hospital closures, we are doing our part to provide stability and
predictability, and to ensure access to care for rural areas. I’m excited to
highlight a groundbreaking proposal that would transform the way CMS pays
certain rural hospitals and hospitals in other low wage areas. As we’ve said
before, accurate and appropriate Medicare payment rates are essential to all
hospitals, especially those serving rural areas. The wage index is an adjustment
to hospital payments to account for differences in local labor costs.
However, disparities exist between high wage index and low wage index
hospitals. A hospital in rural Alabama could receive a Medicare payment of
about $4000 for treating a beneficiary admitted for pneumonia while a
hospital in a high wage area, like many urban communities, could receive a
Medicare payment of nearly $6000 for the same case, all due to differences in
their wage index.
Last year, we invited
comments on how we could improve the Medicare wage index. Many responses
reflected a common concern that the current wage index system perpetuates
disparities in Medicare payment between high and low wage index hospitals
across the country. Commenters stated that higher wage hospitals, by virtue
of higher Medicare payments, can afford to pay higher wages that allow them
to continue receive higher payments; whereas low wage index hospitals cannot
afford to pay wages that would allow them to climb to a higher wage index and
they continue to receive lower hospital payments. Commenters stated that over
time, this has created a downward spiral that increases the disparity in
payments between high wage index hospitals and low wage index hospitals.
Further, under the law, the wage index adjustment must be made in a way that
ensures that aggregate payments to hospitals are not affected by changes --
that is, wage index adjustments must be “budget neutral” on a nation-wide
basis. That means as payments for higher wage index hospitals increase, lower
wage index hospitals get less.
The Inpatient Prospective
Payment System (IPPS) proposed rule puts our Rural Health Strategy into
action by proposing to change the way Medicare factors local labor costs into
hospital payments. To address these Medicare payment disparities, CMS is
proposing to increase the wage index of rural and other low wage index
hospitals. This change would begin to bring payments to rural and other low
wage index hospitals closer to urban neighbors, allowing them to improve
quality, attract more talent, and improve patient access. We are considering
several ways address these disparities. Each approach would have different
levels of impact, and we are seeking input on the most appropriate way to
address this issue.
In addition, CMS is
proposing a change to the wage index “rural floor” calculation. Under the
law, the IPPS wage index value for an urban hospital cannot be less than the
wage index value for hospitals located in rural areas in the state. This is
known as the “rural floor” provision. CMS is concerned that some hospitals
may be using urban-to-rural reclassifications to inappropriately influence
the rural floor wage index value. To address this concern, CMS proposes
removing urban-to-rural hospital reclassifications from the calculation of
the rural floor wage index value.
If finalized, these
proposed policies would go into effect on October 1, 2019, benefiting certain
rural and other low wage communities as early as this year. The proposed
changes would create an opportunity to make sure that the current foundation
of rural healthcare – hospitals – are in the best position possible to
improve the quality and sustainability of care they are providing and that
the approximately 60 million patients living in rural areas maintain access
to critical services. I look forward to your input on these proposals, so we
can ensure we are achieving our goals of better serving individuals in rural
areas by empowering patients in rural communities and providing high quality
accessible healthcare.
And this is just the
beginning – our work on behalf of rural Americans is not done, as we are
turning to how we can support local communities in their efforts to overhaul
the current way of thinking for rural healthcare. We intend to test new
approaches to policy in this area and leverage all of the agency’s
authorities to improve the current system. We recently announced the CMS
Primary Care First Initiative, a new set of payment models for primary care
practices and other providers. One of the new payment models, the Direct
Contracting model, includes an option for innovative organizations to take on
financial risk in a defined region, which could be an option to support rural
transformation of care. Driving accountability to a local level empowers communities
to devise strategies to meet their unique health care needs. We are seeking
public comment through a new Request for Information and welcome your
insights on how to ensure the Geographic Option of Direct Contracting works
for rural areas.
CMS is also developing
another new innovative model specifically for rural communities that will
come out later this year that will offer a pathway for stakeholder coalitions
comprised of providers, purchasers, and payers to invest collectively in
increasing access and improving rural healthcare delivery. The model will
offer support and resources so that participating communities will be able to
design a customized model that reflects the aligned priorities and needs of
their own community. Ultimately, the goal is to improve the quality of care
delivered in rural communities; enhance patient access to care; modernize the
community’s delivery system, including expanding access to innovative
technologies; and transition rural providers to value-based payment models that
promote provider stability and financial sustainability.
Rethinking Rural Health is
a vital part of CMS’s push to transform the healthcare delivery system to a
model that delivers high quality, affordable, and accessible healthcare for
every American. While we have undertaken a number of steps, we know there is
much more work to be done-- our beneficiaries residing in rural areas deserve
nothing less.
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Get CMS news at cms.gov/newsroom, sign up for CMS news via email and follow CMS on Twitter CMS
Administrator @SeemaCMS, @CMSgov, and @CMSgovPress.
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Wednesday, May 8, 2019
Putting our Rethinking Rural Health Strategy into Action
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