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CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 16, 2019
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
CMS Rules Put Patients First Updating Requirements for
Arbitration Agreements and New Regulations That Put Patients Over Paperwork
Proposed rule saves $616 million annually for nursing homes
Today, the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced two rules – one proposed and
one final – that emphasize the agency’s commitment to ensuring safety and
quality in nursing homes. These rules are components of the agency’s five-part approach to ensuring a
high-quality long term care (LTC) facility system, which Administrator Seema
Verma announced in April. Administrator Verma’s approach includes
strengthening requirements for LTC facilities, also known as nursing homes,
working with states to enforce statutory and regulatory requirements,
increasing transparency of nursing home performance, improving quality, and
putting patient safety first by removing unnecessary burdens on providers. In
addition to protecting patients and reducing burdens, the rule helps nursing
homes focus their resources on their residents by saving them $616 million in
administrative costs annually that can be reinvested in patient care.
The proposed rule
(Medicare and Medicaid Programs; Requirements for Long-Term Care (LTC)
Facilities: Regulatory Provisions to Promote Efficiency and Transparency)
allows LTC facility providers to devote more of their time and resources to
their residents – instead of unnecessary paperwork – by eliminating obsolete
or excessively burdensome regulations. It is also part of
CMS’agency-wide effort to reduce burden, the Patients Over Paperwork
initiative, and would respond to President Trump’s Executive Order that
directs federal agencies to “cut the red tape.”
“The Trump administration
is helping nursing homes provide high-quality care by allowing them to focus
their time and resources on residents – not unnecessary process and outdated
regulations,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma. “We know our regulations
work best when they are smart, targeted, and patient-focused, so we have
taken a close look at our rules with patients and burden in mind. We’ve
identified opportunities for reducing provider burden while maintaining high
quality resident care.”
The proposed rule would
eliminate prescriptive requirements and allow commonsense flexibilities.
For example, CMS proposes to eliminate unnecessary details of the
Quality Assurance Improvement Program (QAPI) requirements while maintaining
the overall structure and intent – improving patient outcomes. This
would help nursing homes implement more effective quality improvement
programs.
In addition, CMS proposes
revisions to certain requirements included in the third phase of CMS’
comprehensive 2016 regulatory overhaul, which are scheduled to be implemented
in November 2019. To avoid confusion and promote transparency, CMS
proposes to allow one year following the effective date of the final rule for
implementation.
In a related effort to
protect nursing home residents’ right to make informed choices, CMS has
issued a final rule updating the requirements nursing homes must meet to use
binding arbitration agreements. Pre-dispute binding arbitration
agreements are arrangements, whereby two parties agree to settle future
disputes through an arbitration process rather than through litigation, and
requires both parties to accept the arbitration process’ outcome. In
October 2016, the previous administration banned the use of pre-dispute
binding arbitration agreements in long term care facilities, but was unable
to enforce it due to a legal challenge and subsequent injunction.
In June 2017, in
accordance with the injunction, CMS published a proposed rule that would
remove the ban on pre-dispute binding arbitration agreements, and solicited
public comments. CMS determined that resident rights must be protected by
allowing them the ability to choose their method of dispute resolution, while
preserving access to all possible choices, including arbitration, a method
that often cost resident much less than litigation.
The CMS proposal supports
patients and their caregivers by removing the ban on binding arbitration
agreements while requiring nursing homes to ensure residents have the ability
to choose the method of dispute resolution they want. CMS is allowing
binding arbitration agreements, but will prohibit nursing homes from
requiring residents to sign binding arbitration agreements as a condition for
receiving care, and will require nursing homes to inform residents or their
representatives that they are not required to sign a binding arbitration
agreement. Finally, CMS is prohibiting nursing home arbitration
agreements from including language preventing residents or anyone else from
communication with federal, state, or local officials.
These proposed and final
rules are the latest in a series of steps CMS is taking to focus on patients,
increase efficiencies and transparency, and strengthen the safety and quality
of care beneficiaries receive in this setting. To learn more about the
proposed and final rules, please visit https://www.federalregister.gov/public-inspection.
CMS looks forward to feedback on the proposed rule and will accept comments
until September 16, 2019. Comments may be submitted electronically
here: https://www.regulations.gov/
Fact sheets on each of
these rules are available here: LTC Regulatory Provisions and Arbitration Agreement.
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Administrator @SeemaCMS, @CMSgov, and @CMSgovPress.
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Tuesday, July 16, 2019
CMS Rules Put Patients First Updating Requirements for Arbitration Agreements and New Regulations That Put Patients Over Paperwork
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