New Hampshire wants a federal judge to let the state help defend CMS’ approval of its plan to implement Medicaid work requirements.
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New Hampshire wants a federal judge to let the state help defend CMS’ approval of its plan to implement Medicaid work requirements.
CMS Administrator Seema Verma said stakeholders can expect more Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI) models to be mandatory and for all upcoming payment models to include resources for state Medicaid adoption as she teased new rural health models and a long-awaited radiation oncology model in a speech to the National Association of Accountable Care Organizations (NAACOS) on Thursday (April 25).
CMS Administrator Seema Verma said the agency is working to get a final rule updating the Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly published as part of CMS’ commitment to improving care for those dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid.
Members of Congress from both parties are intervening on opposite sides of a hot-button lawsuit that will help determine whether Medicaid beneficiaries can sue their state government if the state removes certain medical providers -- such as those that perform abortions -- from the state’s Medicaid program.
CMS Administrator Seema Verma on Wednesday (April 24) invited states that aren’t currently participating in the duals demonstration to talk with the agency about starting their own version, whether through the capitated financial alignment model, the managed fee-for-service model or some other state-specific model worked out with the agency.
The advocacy arm of the American Cancer Society launched a major education campaign on Tuesday (April 23) to promote Medicaid in red states at a time when efforts to pass Medicaid expansion in some of those states appear to be gaining traction.
Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost (R) on Monday (April 22) called for the Ohio legislature to enact four policies targeting spread pricing practices by pharmacy benefit managers that would route all state drug purchases through a single PBM contract, give the state auditor unrestricted authority to review all PBM drug contracts, make PBMs fiduciaries and ban nondisclosure agreements regarding drug pricing with the state.
Lawmakers in two Western states are only a few steps away from approving legislation that could result in government-sponsored health plans competing for the first time in the Affordable Care Act’s health insurance exchanges.
A federal appeals court has agreed to expedite its consideration of the two cases challenging the legality of Medicaid work requirements after CMS asked that the cases be accelerated.
The Montana legislature gave final approval to a six-year extension of the state’s Medicaid expansion Thursday (April 18), along with a request for CMS to approve work requirements, and Gov. Steve Bullock (D) indicated he would sign it into law.
The Congressional Budget Office estimates that 1.4 million more people went uninsured in 2018 compared to 2016 and most of the drop came from unsubsidized individuals in the individual market.
According to new information by the HHS Office of Civil Rights (OCR) released Friday (April 19), smartphone apps created by third-party developers and not by providers or business associates covered under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) are not subject to HIPAA rules, even if a breach occurs.
CMS reversed course and, along with the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT, will give stakeholders an additional 30 days to comment on proposed interoperability rules the agencies released in February, pushing the comment deadline back to June 3.
CMS is seeking an accelerated appeal in the litigation over Medicaid work requirements because, according to the agency, a district judge’s recent rulings that invalidated work requirements in Arkansas and Kentucky will cause “significant disruption to the detriment of the states and the federal government.”
Kentucky’s Cabinet of Health and Family Services touted an independent evaluator’s plan to use a randomized control population to evaluate the state’s controversial work requirements program, but the evaluation’s approval is now on hold as CMS appeals a pair of judicial decisions that blocked Medicaid work requirements in Arkansas and Kentucky.
A measure to continue Montana’s Medicaid expansion and add work requirements to the program cleared a key legislative hurdle Monday (April 15).
A provision in the Trump administration’s point-of-sale rebate proposal questioning whether formulary placement-related rebates are protected by the anti-kickback statute generated strong reactions from the generic drug and pharmacy benefit manager lobbies, which are at odds on the issue.
HHS should issue guidance to help states understand what therapeutic foster care services can be covered under Medicaid and improve the coordination of those services, federal Medicaid advisers said Thursday (April 11).
Federal Medicaid advisers expressed general support for CMS’ goal to encourage better sharing of electronic health records through its recent proposed rule on interoperability, but they declined Friday (April 12) to weigh in with any formal comments on the proposed rule, even as a few commissioners worried that the rule’s timeline for implementing new data-access requirements is too aggressive.
Federal Medicaid advisers voted Thursday (April 11) to recommend that Congress eliminate the requirement for states to establish a Recovery Audit Contractor program.
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