CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 2, 2019
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
Trump Administration Finalizes Policies to Advance Rural Health
and Medical Innovation
Historic changes to the Inpatient Prospective Payment System
(IPPS) and Long-Term Care Hospital (LTCH) Prospective Payment System mean
better quality and access
Today, under the
leadership of President Trump, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS) finalized policy changes to spur competition and innovation
that will help deliver improved care and outcomes at a better value to
patients. The final rule updates Medicare payment policies for hospitals
under the Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS) and the Long-Term Care
Hospital (LTCH) Prospective Payment System (PPS) for fiscal year 2020 and
advances two key CMS priorities—“Rethinking Rural Health” and “Unleashing
Innovation”—by making historic changes to how Medicare pays hospitals.
“The Trump Administration
is providing relief to rural communities and addressing payment policies that
have disadvantaged rural hospitals, making it harder for them to stay open
and provide care to the one in five Americans living in rural areas,” said
CMS Administrator Seema Verma. “The changes we’re finalizing in today’s rule
are long overdue and improve the way Medicare pays hospitals, which will help
many rural hospitals maintain their healthcare labor force, to ensure that
patients have access to high-quality, affordable healthcare.”
In last year’s proposed
rule, CMS invited comments on changes to the Medicare inpatient hospital wage
index, which is an adjustment to inpatient payment rates to account for local
differences in wages that hospitals face in their respective labor markets. A
common concern from the public was that the current wage index system worsens
wage index disparities between hospitals in high-wage areas and low-wage
areas, which tend to be rural. Rural areas have experienced more than
100 hospital closures since 2010 and continue to face limited access to
specialty care.
This final rule addresses
these disparities by increasing the wage index for certain low-wage index
hospitals, including many rural hospitals, and ensures rural Americans have
access to needed care. The wage index is intended to measure differences in
hospital wage levels across geographic regions and is updated annually based
on wage data reported by hospitals. Hospitals located in areas with wages
below the national average receive a lower Medicare payment rate than
hospitals in areas with above-average wages. For example, a hospital in a
low-wage rural community could receive a Medicare payment of about $4,000 for
treating a beneficiary admitted for pneumonia, while a hospital in a
high-wage area (many urban communities) could receive a Medicare payment of
nearly $6,000 for the same case due to wage index differences. With the
changes made to the hospital wage index, CMS is helping many rural and other
low-wage hospitals attract and maintain a highly skilled workforce, which
will strengthen competition and lead to greater choice for patients in rural
areas.
This final rule also
ensures Medicare beneficiaries will have access to a world-class healthcare
system by unleashing medical innovation, removing barriers to competition,
and enabling faster access to new medical technology through several payment
changes.
“President Trump is
strengthening Medicare by clearing the way for Medicare beneficiaries to
access the same transformative technologies and treatment options emerging in
the private market,” said Administrator Verma. “Through our efforts to
improve transparency and reduce regulatory burden, we are hearing more than
ever from innovators who want to work with us so that Medicare beneficiaries
have access to the latest advances in healthcare.”
This final rule increases
Medicare add-on payments known as the new technology add-on payment (NTAP)
for cases with high costs involving eligible new technologies. The increased
payment from 50% to 65% will promote patient access and reduce uncertainty
that innovators face about Medicare payment for new medical technologies.
CMS is also modernizing
payment policies for medical devices that meet the FDA’s Breakthrough Devices
designation for expedited FDA approval or clearance. Under an expedited
timeframe, it can be challenging for innovators to gather evidence of the
device’s “substantial clinical improvement” which is required to qualify for
Medicare new technology add-on payments. To address this issue, CMS finalized
an alternative NTAP pathway in which Breakthrough Devices would no longer be
required to demonstrate evidence of “substantial clinical improvement”
to qualify for new technology add-on payments. This will provide additional
Medicare payment for these technologies while real-world evidence is
emerging, giving Medicare beneficiaries timely access to the latest
innovations in treatment. And, to give innovators greater transparency and
predictability on the CMS NTAP approval process, CMS is finalizing changes to
clarify our general policies on “substantial clinical improvement” to qualify
for new technology add on payments.
CMS is also finalizing
policies to remove barriers for new antimicrobial therapies, which treat
drug-resistant infections, and are currently in short supply. Drug-resistant
infections are a public health crisis, affecting more than 2 million
Americans each year and resulting in thousands of deaths annually, with the
majority of new diagnoses and subsequent fatalities attributed to Medicare
beneficiaries. To encourage the development of antimicrobials, CMS has also
created an alternative NTAP pathway, which would no longer require new
antimicrobial drugs to meet the “substantial clinical improvement” criteria
and would also increase the NTAP from 50% to 75%. Importantly, the drugs
eligible for this pathway will be new antimicrobials which have received a
Qualified Infectious Disease Products (QIDP) designation from the FDA. These
particular antibiotics are specifically designed with the intent of
addressing resistant infections.
Modernizing the evidence requirement
and payment level in a targeted manner will help foster innovation and
improve outcomes for patients.
The IPPS and LTCH PPS
final rule is one of five Medicare payment rules released on a fiscal year
cycle to define payment and policy for inpatient hospitals, long term care
hospitals, inpatient rehabilitation facilities, inpatient psychiatric
facilities, skilled nursing facilities, and hospices.
For a fact sheet on the
final rule (CMS-1716-F), please visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/fiscal-year-fy-2020-medicare-hospital-inpatient-prospective-payment-system-ipps-and-long-term-acute-0
To view the final rule
(CMS-1716-F), please visit: https://www.federalregister.gov/public-inspection
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Administrator @SeemaCMS, @CMSgov, and @CMSgovPress.
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Friday, August 2, 2019
Trump Administration Finalizes Policies to Advance Rural Health and Medical Innovation
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