Doc pay, price transparency on Congress’ healthcare agenda

This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback.

Lawmakers advanced or introduced a number of healthcare bills this week, including a bipartisan measure that would reform how Medicare pays physicians — a long-awaited policy for doctors who argue their reimbursement doesn’t keep pace with the cost of care.

Other legislation making moves in Congress include a bill that aims to improve transparency in Medicare Advantage prior authorizations and a policy that would help international healthcare professionals practice in the U.S. 

The raft of legislation comes ahead of the midterm elections this year, where healthcare is expected to be a key priority for voters.

About 6 in 10 adults say they’re very or somewhat worried about affording healthcare costs, like insurance expenses or out-of-pocket spending on doctor’s visits or prescription drugs, according to a poll released Thursday by health policy researcher KFF. And about half of voters said it’s extremely important for candidates to talk about healthcare expenses and the future of Medicare as the midterms approach. 

Here are five healthcare bills lawmakers advanced this week: 

Lawmakers push physician pay reform

A bipartisan group of lawmakers, including Reps. Kim Schrier, D-Wash., John Joyce, R-Pa., and Greg Murphy, R-N.C., introduced a bill in the House on Wednesday that would update how Medicare pays physicians.

The Patients First Act would tie doctor reimbursement to a measure of inflation, a change supported by provider lobbies and sometimes recommended by experts who advise Congress on Medicare policy. 

The bill would also create a pilot program that would pay primary care providers a per-member, per-month fee alongside some fee-for-service reimbursement, in a bid to better capture the work the primary care clinicians do, the lawmakers said. 

Additionally, the legislation would create a physician task force at the CMS to develop quality metrics and limit administrative burden, increase the budget neutrality threshold for physician pay updates and require the CMS to undergo a notice and comment period for all mandatory innovation center experiments. 

Provider groups applauded the proposal, saying the bill would modernize the Medicare physician pay schedule and boost investment in primary care. 

“Because Medicare’s physician fee schedule influences payment rates across the health care system, these reforms have the potential to improve access to care for patients far beyond Medicare,” Stephanie Quinn, senior vice president for external affairs and practice experience at the American Academy of Family Physicians, said in a statement Wednesday.

Two Medicare Advantage bills move forward

The Improving Seniors’ Timely Access to Care Act, a measure that aims to improve transparency and speed prior authorization in MA, advanced to the full House Wednesday

The House Ways and Means Committee unanimously voted 42 to 0 to move the bill forward. 

The bill, introduced last year by a bipartisan group of lawmakers in the House and Senate, would require MA plans to adopt an electronic prior authorization system, clarify regulators’ authority to set timelines on prior authorization decisions and mandate HHS agencies report on electronic prior authorization oversight and progress. 

The legislation comes as prior authorization has become a significant issue for lawmakers and regulators. Providers have long complained that prior authorization delays needed care and heaps administrative work on clinicians, but payers defend the utilization management practice as a method to keep costs down. 

Still, a number of insurers say they’ve cut back on the preapproval for care after a push from the Trump administration and are working to standardize electronic data submission requirements for medical services commonly subject to prior authorization.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply