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Stimulus package includes moratorium on Medicaid changes

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Hospital officials seem to be in luck. The $790 billion economic stimulus package, which has now been agreed upon in principle by lawmakers after a contentious debate, included a number of items that they'd hoped to see pass.

These items include an extension of a moratorium on Medicaid regulations that they argued would cut their funding, moving the deadline up from March 31 to June 30. The stimulus package also proposes a temporary $87 billion increase for the federal share of Medicaid funding, along with a temporary increase of $500 million for disproportionate share hospitals.

In addition, the package also includes a measure that would block a scheduled Medicare pay cut for teaching hospitals.

Other health-related items in the package include $19 billion to provide incentives for health IT adoption, and $21 billion to subsidize health plan premiums for workers paying through the COBRA program.

To get more background on legislative developments:
- read this Modern Healthcare piece (reg. req.)

Related Articles:
Governors call for healthcare stimulus plan
Hospital groups seek moratorium on Medicaid regs
State governors ask for Medicaid help

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This HITECH Act -- and $17 billion down-payment – is a grand first act toward establishing pervasive electronic health records throughout the U.S. Salting the mine with incentives for Medicare and Medicaid patients surely gets providers using HIT and building an EHR infrastructure (along with streamlining care for seniors and uninsured.)

But, will that Medicare/Medicaid dose be enough to change the system for everyone else, most especially those in their teens, 20’s and 30’s who will benefit most from wellness, preventive care, and complete medical records over their lifetimes? How will such efforts expand beyond rural areas and selected populations? Are we ready to start creating portable records for uninsured children, or are we going to let them slip through the cracks in our imperfect information environment? The goal of comprehensive care first requires comprehensive records. Learn more: www.healthcaretownhall.com

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