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CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 1, 2022
Contact: CMS Media Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
New CMS
Rule Increases Payments for Acute Care Hospitals and Advances Health
Equity, Maternal Health
CMS
Integrates Equity and Maternal Health Quality Measures into Final
Hospital Payment Rule
Today, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS) issued a final rule for inpatient and long-term care
hospitals that builds on the Biden-Harris Administration’s key
priorities to advance health equity and improve maternal health
outcomes. As required by statute, the fiscal year (FY) 2023 Inpatient
Prospective Payment System (IPPS) and Long-Term Care Hospital (LTCH)
Prospective Payment System (PPS) rule updates Medicare payments and
policies for hospitals, drives high-quality, person-centered care, and
promotes fiscal stewardship of the Medicare program. In addition, the
rule finalizes new measures to encourage hospitals to build health
equity into their core functions. These actions will improve care for
people and communities who are disadvantaged or underserved by the
health care system.
The rule includes three health equity-focused
measures in hospital quality programs and establishes a
“Birthing-Friendly” hospital designation. CMS will award this new
designation to hospitals that participate in a statewide or national
perinatal quality improvement collaborative program and have
implemented the recommended quality interventions.
For acute care hospitals paid under the IPPS
that successfully participate in the Hospital Inpatient Quality
Reporting (IQR) Program and are meaningful electronic health record
users, the final rule will result in an increase in operating payment
rates of 4.3%. This reflects a FY 2023 projected hospital market basket
update of 4.1%, reduced by a statutorily required productivity
adjustment of a 0.3 percentage point and plus a 0.5 percentage point
adjustment required by statute. This is the highest market basket
update in the last 25 years and is primarily due to higher expected
growth in compensation prices for hospital workers. Under the LTCH PPS,
CMS expects payments in FY 2023 to increase by approximately 2.4% or
$71 million.
“CMS is taking action to support hospitals,
including updating payments to hospitals by a significantly higher rate
than in the proposed IPPS rule. This final rule aligns hospital
payments with CMS’ vision of ensuring access to
health care for all people with Medicare and maintaining incentives for
our hospital partners to operate efficiently,” said CMS Administrator
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure. “It also takes important steps to advance
health equity by encouraging hospitals to implement practices that
reduce maternal morbidity and mortality.”
Advancing Health Equity
Consistent with the agency’s definition of health equity, CMS is
working to advance health equity by designing, implementing, and
operationalizing policies and programs that support health for all the
people served by our programs, eliminating avoidable differences in
health outcomes experienced by people who are disadvantaged or
underserved, and providing the care and support that our enrollees
need to thrive.
To address health care disparities in hospital
inpatient care and beyond, CMS is adopting three health equity-focused
measures in the IQR Program. The first measure assesses a hospital’s
commitment to establishing a culture of equity and delivering more
equitable health care by capturing concrete activities across five key
domains, including strategic planning, data collection, data analysis,
quality improvement, and leadership engagement. The second and third
measures capture screening and identification of patient-level,
health-related social needs — such as food insecurity, housing
instability, transportation needs, utility difficulties,
and interpersonal safety. By screening for and identifying such
unmet needs, hospitals will be in a better position to serve patients
holistically by addressing and monitoring what are often key
contributors to poor physical and mental health outcomes.
In the near future, CMS is also interested in
using measures focused on connecting patients with identified social
needs to community resources or services. CMS sought comment on the
proposed rule. In the final rule, CMS acknowledges the robust comments
received on key considerations that inform our approach to improving
data collection, to better measure and analyze disparities across
programs and policies, and approaches for updating the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program (HRRP) that encourage providers to
improve performance for socially at-risk populations.
CMS is also discontinuing the use of proxy data
for uncompensated care costs in determining uncompensated care payments
for Indian Health Service and Tribal hospitals, and hospitals in Puerto
Rico, and we are establishing a new supplemental payment to prevent
undue long-term financial disruption for these hospitals and to promote
long-term payment stability. CMS is also finalizing new flexibilities
for graduate medical education for rural hospitals participating in rural
track programs, which will help promote workforce development in rural
areas.
Improving Maternal Health Outcomes
CMS is creating a new hospital designation to
identify “Birthing-Friendly” hospitals and additional quality measure
reporting to drive improvements in maternal health outcomes. CMS is
finalizing this designation following the release of the comprehensive CMS Maternity Care Action Plan.
The Biden-Harris Administration has championed
policies to improve maternal health and equity since taking office.
Earlier this year, Vice President Harris convened a first-ever White
House meeting with Cabinet Secretaries and agency leaders, including
Secretary Becerra and CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, to
discuss the Administration’s whole-of-government approach to reducing
maternal mortality and morbidity. In December 2021, Vice President
Harris announced a historic call to action to improve health outcomes
for parents and their young children in the United States. Implementing
this new hospital designation is part of the
Biden-Harris Administration’s continued response to that call to
action, as noted in the CMS Maternity Care Action Plan.
The “Birthing-Friendly” hospital designation
will provide important information to consumers about hospitals with a
demonstrated commitment to reducing maternal morbidity and mortality by
implementing best practices that advance health care quality and safety
for pregnant and postpartum patients.
Conditions of Participation
Pandemic Reporting for Hospital and Critical Access Hospitals (CAH)
CMS proposed to continue the current COVID-19
reporting requirements for hospitals and CAHs as well as establish new
reporting requirements for future public health emergencies (PHE).
Based on public feedback, CMS is finalizing the proposed requirements for
continued COVID-19-related reporting for hospitals and CAHs with a
reduced number of data categories as an off ramp to the current PHE.
CMS is not finalizing the proposed reporting requirements for future
PHEs.
Continued Public Reporting of
Patient Safety Metrics
CMS uses quality measures to ensure safety and
quality within the health care system and to pay providers through
value-based programs. For the FY 2023 Hospital-Acquired Condition (HAC)
Reduction Program, CMS proposed to pause — meaning not calculate and
subsequently not publicly report — the data for the PSI-90 measure,
which is a composite measure that covers multiple patient safety
indicators, such as pressure sores, falls, and sepsis. CMS’ proposal
reflected concerns about the impact COVID-19 would have on the ability
to interpret data and was also sensitive to the risks of financially
penalizing hospitals for factors potentially out of their control. CMS
recognizes the importance of this measure for patients and providers
and is finalizing the calculation and public reporting of the CMS
PSI-90 measure results. CMS will include the measure in Star Ratings in
alignment with the feedback we received. Although this measure will be
publicly reported, it will not be used in payment calculations in the
HAC to avoid unintentional penalties related to the uneven impacts
of COVID-19 across the country.
For a fact sheet on the final payment rule
visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/fy-2023-hospital-inpatient-prospective-payment-system-ipps-and-long-term-care-hospital-prospective
For a fact sheet specific to the maternal
health and health equity measures included in the final payment rule
visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/fy-2023-hospital-inpatient-prospective-payment-system-ipps-and-long-term-care-hospitals-ltch-pps-1
The FY 2023 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule can be
downloaded from the Federal Register at: https://www.federalregister.gov/public-inspection/current
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