CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 26, 2019
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
Trump Administration Puts Patients Over Paperwork by Reducing
Healthcare Administrative Costs
Finalized policy projected to save approximately $8 billion over 10 years, increases access to life-saving organ transplants
Today, the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is taking action at President Trump’s
direction to “cut the red tape,” bringing relief to America’s healthcare
providers by reducing unnecessary burden, allowing them to focus on their top
priority – patients. The Omnibus Burden Reduction (Conditions of
Participation) Final Rule strengthens patient safety by removing unnecessary,
obsolete, or excessively burdensome health regulations on hospitals and other
healthcare providers. This rule advances CMS’s Patients over Paperwork initiative
by saving providers an estimated 4.4 million hours previously spent on
paperwork annually, with overall total provider savings projected to be
approximately $8 billion over the next 10 years, giving doctors more time to
spend with their patients.
“In my trips across the
country, I’ve heard time and again that unnecessary regulations are
increasing costs on providers and they are losing time with patients as a
result,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma. “This final rule brings a common
sense approach to reducing regulations and gives providers more time to care
for their patients, while reducing administrative costs and improving health
outcomes.”
CMS is focused on making
sure patients get safe, high quality care and time with their healthcare
providers. As such, CMS conducted a comprehensive review of regulations to
determine where changes to obsolete, duplicative, or unnecessary requirements
could be made to improve healthcare delivery. The agency is finalizing
changes that streamline and improve regulations to provide greater focus on
patient safety and improve quality of care. CMS performed this work from
three perspectives: improving patient care, eliminating burdensome rules, and
eliminating duplicative regulations.
In an effort to improve
patient care, CMS is responding to President Trump’s Executive Order on
improving kidney health in America by strengthening the organ donation
process. Specifically, the rule finalizes changes to transplant center
requirements giving providers greater flexibility and freedom to support
patients who need organ transplants. Current Medicare transplant center
regulations for re-approval are burdensome. They are so burdensome, in fact,
that they have led to some transplant programs avoiding performing
transplants for certain patients, causing some organs to be discarded. The
Omnibus rule will eliminate these requirements – specifically for data
submission – which will reduce the number of organs that are discarded and
increase the number of organs that are available for transplantation. As a
result, more patients on the transplant waiting list will have access to
lifesaving organ transplants.
Additionally, under
existing regulations, each Medicare-certified hospital is required to develop
and maintain ongoing Quality Assessment and Performance Improvement (QAPI)
programs and infection control programs. The final rule will streamline the
regulations to allow multiple hospitals within a system to employ a unified
QAPI program. This change makes it easier for hospitals to implement best
practices and innovations among facilities resulting in quicker improvements
in quality of care. This also benefits small and rural hospitals by allowing
them to draw from the resources and clinical expertise of a larger hospital
system.
The final rule also
focuses on eliminating burdensome rules by reducing certain required
activities. For example, under previous rules, orders for X-rays were
required to be written and signed. Under the new regulation, such orders may
be transmitted in written form, by telephone, or electronically.
Additionally, by revising timelines for some requirements, providers will now
have more time to spend on direct patient care. Specifically, CMS is reducing
the frequency of policy reviews and program evaluations that rural health
clinics and federally qualified health centers are required to conduct from
annually to once every two years.
Finally, CMS focused on
eliminating duplicative requirements, while carefully considering patient
safety. An example of this is flexibility with respect to emergency
preparedness. Under current rules, providers across care settings are
required to review their emergency preparedness plans annually. The proposed
rule reduced emergency preparedness requirements across care settings,
including long-term care facilities like nursing homes. However, through the
comment process, CMS heard concerns that this annual requirement is necessary
for patient and resident safety in the nursing home setting, so this proposal
was not finalized for long-term care facilities.
The Omnibus final rule is
the result of extensive work that included gathering feedback from various
stakeholders, including patients, clinicians and other providers. CMS held
102 listening sessions in 46 states and two territories, with representatives
from the clinician community, hospice, home health, and across the spectrum
of providers. Additionally, CMS issued two Requests for Information (RFIs) to
better understand where providers were experiencing the most burden. The first
RFI, released across nine proposed rules in 2017, yielded 3,040 mentions of
burden, which CMS categorized as related to 1,146 different issues. CMS
analyzed all input and has taken action on, or is actively considering, 83
percent of the burden topics raised that are actionable by CMS. Some of the
remainder were referred to other federal agencies for action. Others have not
been acted upon for various reasons, including those deemed to be statutorily
prohibited. The second follow-up RFI was released in 2019 to gather new ideas
not conveyed during the first RFI, as well as innovative ideas that may help
broaden perspectives about potential solutions. CMS is currently analyzing
comments and will continue seeking stakeholder input in the years to come,
part of our core culture.
The Omnibus final rule is
expected to achieve approximately $800 million in savings annually through
the year 2028, or approximately $8 billion over the next 10 years. For
purposes of tracking savings under Executive Order 13771, “Reducing
Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs,” the savings number is
calculated in 2016 dollars and discounted at 7 percent relative to 2016 to
ensure ease of comparison across all regulatory activities pursuant to the
Executive Order. This alternative calculation essentially eliminates the
effect of inflation in CMS’s estimates, resulting in $647 million in annual
savings in perpetuity for purposes of the Executive Order.
For a fact sheet on the
final rule (CMS-3346-F), please visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/omnibus-burden-reduction-conditions-participation-final-rule-cms-3346-f
To view the final rule
(CMS-3346-F), please visit: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/09/30/2019-20736/medicare-and-medicaid-programs-regulatory-provisions-to-promote-program-efficiency-transparency-and
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Administrator @SeemaCMS, @CMSgov, and @CMSgovPress.
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Thursday, September 26, 2019
Trump Administration Puts Patients Over Paperwork by Reducing Healthcare Administrative Costs
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